Well.. it's not that it isn't possible, it's that it's not needed.Borgholio wrote:I think the only advantage of a turret would be if you can somehow compress or accelerate the beam to increase it's destructive power. Although given what we see in ST, that doesn't appear to be possible under normal conditions since nobody after ENT seemed to use turreted mounts.
A turret is a physical thing that can jam. Whatever they have in TOS (it could be turrets in those dome things for all we know - on screen canon and all) is perfectly fine firing at all angles. This is carried into the Movies with ST2 and in Enterprise in In a Mirror Darkly).
Either they took the turrets "inside" somehow or they surpassed them.
By Phaser Strip time (TNG onwards) a Turret just seems completely pointless. At no point has a strip ever "jammed" or "blocked" or anything. They just do their thing, seemingly 180 degrees (or more depending on mounting) in any direction, skipping between 0 and 180 in a single frame or two.
Strips are, in every measureable way, near as I can tell, better than a turret cannon in every single circumstance. Except...
That and the Defiant - with its pulse canons.In the TNG series finale, the future Enterprise-D had that spinal mount phaser that was incredibly powerful, but I don't know if that was due to accelerating a normal phaser beam or if it was just a very long tube with a ton of emitters in it all working together...
Evidently you can get "more power per square inch" or whatever you want to call it, with a spinal mount or "fixed place" - but *not that much* (at least for the Defiant). And Ent-D in All good things... hmm. Powerful as fuck but it could just be 25 years of enhansed phasers rather than being spinal. We have no clue there. I would assume not full of phaser strips, though, else why spinal mount it? Why not just open it up to have that fire power from any angle? - I presume it's a cross between the Defiant and strip phasers. in my own head, i mean.