Singular Quartet wrote:"The Cage" - Lee Kelso states that the Enterprise could bring to bear enough firepower to "blast half a continent". Even assuming a continent the size of Australia, and taking a minimalist approach to the defination of "blast", that's a lot of firepower, generated by the Enterprise's laser weapons, which are later stated to be vastly inferior to phasers.
Did he say in one shot? Nope. The ship coupld stay up there for weeks doing this, foe all we know.
"Where No Man Has Gone Before" - Enterprise travels to edge of the galaxy for the first time - from Earth, the nearest possible edge, heading straight up, is something close to 2,500 LY. This episode is also notable for Spock ordering the helmsman to engage "time-warp drives, take us into hyperspace!"
I've watched this episode for years now. Not ONCE is it ever stated or shown that they departed from Earth at the beginning of that episode.
"The Naked Time" - A risky cold-start of the ship's impulse engines flings the ship into reverse at "a speed greater than is possible in normal space", and back in time 71 hours. Earlier, Scotty states that if their intermix formula is wrong, they'll "go up in the biggest blast since the last star around these parts went supernova."
And? Obviously, E7101 is trying to float a turd that attempts to compare the
Enterprise exploding to a supernova. Not true. A firecracker going off could still be "the biggest blast since the last star around these parts went supernova".
"Balance of Terror" - Already remarked on, a plasma weapon vaporizes an asteroid that is at least 2 miles across, in the single shot. Sorry Phalanx, the outpost's shields do fail after the second hit. The third vapes the asteroid, and leaves only a smattering of brittle remneants of the hardest substance known to their science. Bare minimum, 180 GT. Enterprise survives the first hit, which chases them at greater than warp 8, and is able to manuever. A second hit brings down their shields, and a nuke at point-blank range causes damage to the phaser control room. Total casualties at the end of the battle: Romulan ship and all hands, phaser specialist Robert Tomlinson.
First of all, the
Enterprise survives the first hit by first outrunning the blast until it was all but dissipated, and it STILL knocked the crew off their feet. It does NOT maneuver. The nuke causes some of the crew to suffer radiation effects along with damaging the ship. Also, after the first engagement with the Romulans the phaser transfer coil burns out. Note that the
Enterprise suffered NO hits, and Scotty said nothing about the systems being overtaxed.
Also, it took the
Enterprise THREE WEEKS to chase and battle the Romulans. In the beginning of the episode, it was stated that it would take three weeks before the
Enterprise heard from Starfleet command. At the end of the episode, Yeoman Rand informs Kirk that Starfleet has responded.
"Arena" - A recording from Cestus III states that the Gorn approached at sublight along standard Federation approach lanes, before knocking out the planet's phaser batteries in their first salvo.
And this means.....?
"The Alternative Factor" - the entrance of the Lazarus from an antimatter universe generates a violent space-time ripple which Starfleet Command states unequivacably was "felt in all quadrants of the galaxy, and beyond."
Which is obviously bullshit, as the Enterprise is still exploring the galaxy along with 11 ofther sister ships, and Starfleet Command has no influence outside the galaxy.
"Tomorrow is Yesterday" - an accidental slingshot around a black hole throws the Enterprise back to 1967. While cruising through the upper atmosphere in excess of Mach 1, Spock notes with little concern that if Christopher fires his payload of nuclear-tipped air-to-air missiles at the unshielded Enterprise, they "could cause some damage." The Enterprise then locks the jet in a tractor beam, but even after dropping to lowest power, the tractor causes the plane to fragment.
Uh huh. So the Enterprise can damage a 300 year old aircraft? I'm quaking in my boots...
"A Taste of Armageddon" - The computers on the surface list the Enterprise as having been destroyed by a tricobalt warhead, and the landing party killed when the enemy "materialized fusion bombs over the city." When held hostage, Kirk declares that he'll show Anan 7 what devestation really is, and orders Scotty to carry out General Order 24 in two hours. When Anan asks what he's done, Kirk states that if he isn't released by that deadline, the Enterprise will level the surface of the planet and kill everyone on the planet. The Eminians, panicking, attack the Enterprise with a sonic disrupter Scotty rates at 10^18 decibles, or 11 trillion times louder than a 767 on take-off. Far from being a bluff, Scotty moves out of range of the disruptors, and prepares to carry out the order when Kirk reports back in, having destroyed the planetary computers.
Gothmog Lord of Balrogs Location: Angband, Beleriand, Middle-Earth Dec 12th 2001 at 8:38pm (spacebattles.com):
And the weapon was fired from within a Earth normal atmosphere.... AND what people who use this (or argue against it) fail to note is that it was posted as a joke. People should know better than to take things out of context, particularly without checking with the person who did it... right Chris? In other words, you are attempting to invalidate something that I never claimed was valid in the first place (the sheer ludicrousness of the number should have been the give-away, there... ).
"Errand of Mercy" - When trying to convince the Organians to fight against the Klingons, he tells that that they will become slaves of the Empire. The head counciler retorts that if they resist, the Klingons might simply destroy the planet, and be spared the trouble. When the Organians finally decide to intervene, as the Klingon and Federation fleets gather in the system, the counciler states that they cannot permit a war between the Klingons and the Federation, because the conflict in their system would almost certainly result in the destruction of their planet, and would cost far too many lives overall.
So we go from the assumption in "The Cage" that one ship can destroy a planet, to the combined fleets of Earth and the Kingon Empire needed to destroy one?
"Friday's Child" - When the Capellans turn on him, the Klingon agent declares that with the Enterprise off chasing a phony distress call, that his ship could "burn this planet to a cinder." Kirk, Spock, and McCoy take him deadly seriously.
Again, no time indication.
"The Doomsday Machine" - A planet eater is going around chopping planets into rubble with a pure antiproton force beam, and devouring the rubble as fuel. Commodore Matt Decker (father of TMP's Willard Decker) in command of the USS Constellation, attacks the device, which is made of pure neutronium. When his ship is crippled making the direct approach, after exhausting phaser banks and emptying the torpedo magazines, he beams his crew down to the class-M planet in the system, fully expecting the thing to eat his ship. Instead, it ignores the ship, and eats the planet. When Enterprise arrives, under Decker's control, it makes several more direct attacks, and is hit repeatedly with the same weapon used to chop up the planets. Two of those hits occurr after the shields fail, and there is no visible hull damage (as there is on Constellation). When Decker's shuttle explodes inside the maw, there is a slight power drop. So they toss in the entire Constellation, with the fusion impulse reactors rigged to blow. When the planetkiller eats the Constellation, and the reactors cook off at "97.3 megatons", it is stopped dead in space, but is otherwise undamaged.
"..but is otherwise undamaged" LOL!!! Anyway, where's the proof that those beams were of the same intensity as those used to carve up planets? That's like saying the DS2 used the superlaser at full power to destroy the Mon Cal ships in ROTJ. It didn't, or we would have seen a beam a hell of a lot wider, and pass
through those ships without stopping.
"The Changling" - Nomad "sterilizes" the entire Malurian star system, in very short order. The population of 4 billion is exterminated. When it attacks the Enterprise, each of the three shots it fires are stated to rate as equivalent to 90 photon torpedoes, and the 1.5 meter probe easily withstands a single torpedo strike. The third shot (equivalent to a total of 270 photon torpedoes) brings the Enterprise's shields down.
This is according to Spock, who has been wrong before:
http://h4h.com/louis/spock.html
"Mirror, Mirror" - In the mirror universe, Kirk is ordered to exterminate the entire Halkan population. The first part involves utterly destroying their cities the moment they come over the horizon, followed by the extermination of the entire rest of the populace, so that the Empire can mine the dilithium there itself.
And Kirk says he will "lay waste" to the planet, THEN "take what they want". So obviously, the damage can't be catastrophic.
"The Deadly Years" - the Enterprise strays into the Romulan neutral zone, and is attacked by the same class of Bird of Prey as in "Balance of Terror" - it withstands multiple strikes from the plasma weapon, then is transmitted an order to surrender. Kirk broadcasts a clear message to Starfleet, stating that he will self-destruct the ship using a newly installed Corbomite Device, which will instantly destroy *everything* within 200,000 kilometers, and warns that starships should avoid the entire area for at least several weeks after the blast.
First of all, those Romulan ships are NOT the prototype ship seen in "Balance of Terror". Secondly, those plasma weapons are NOT the same as shown in "Balance of Terror", since these dissipate almost immediately after being fired, AND look like nothing more than Klingon torpedoes when they hit the
Enterprise.
"Bread and Circuses" - once again, captured by the locals, Kirk invokes General Order 24, which scares the shit out of Captain Merrick, who was a classmate of Kirk's at the Academy. Instead, Scotty manages to cause a planet-wide power failure as a distraction to rescue Kirk.
Again, no time frame given. And was the power failure "planet-wide"? A car hitting a transformer here where I live can knock out power for several city blocks
now.
"Journey to Babel" - the Enterprise is sabotaged by an Orion pirate posing as an Andorian aide. Trapped at sublight, the Enterprise is attacked by an Orion pirate ship that remains at warp 8. When the opportunity arises, despite remaining at sublight, Enterprise fires on the Orion, crippling it in the first volley. It then self-destructs to prevent capture.
Bullshit, the aide NEVER sabotaged the ship, and it is NEVER stated that the
Enterprise was trapped at sublight speeds.
"Obsession" - Kirk finally lures the cloud-creature back to its home planet, Tycho IV. To lure it, they bait it to the surface with human blood, then set a charge of one-ounce of TOS uber-antimatter... the resulting explosion tears the atmosphere of the planet off.
http://h4h.com/louis/spock.html
"The Immunity Syndrome" - investigating the destruction of the USS Intrepid, and wiped out billions of people in Gamma 7A, they discover an 11,000 mile-long space-ameoba, which consumes energy, both mechanical and biological. Spock discovers that the plasma within the cell is largely gelatinous, with a liquid core near the center and nucleus. The Enterprise persues Spock's shuttle into the heart of the creature, and plants a bomb. The resulting explosion virtually atomizes the cell.
So they explode a bomb in the middle of an amoeba that was on the verge of seperating anyway, and this is somehow amazing?
"A Piece of the Action" - Enterprise uses ship phasers on stun to knock out an entire block's worth of fighting mobsters in one fell swoop. Fun side note, Oxmyx tells Kirk to meet up with his boys at "the yellow fire plug at the end of the street." It takes Scotty less than 5 seconds to pinpoint the exact location...
Bullshit, once again. It is Kirk that calls in the exact location for this blast, on his communicator.
"By Any Other Name" - The Enterprise's second trip through the galactic barrier, on a beeline for Andromeda.
Thanks to an upgrade provided by technologically superior aliens FROM the Andromeda galaxy.
"Patterns of Force" - when tracked by an incoming thermonuke at warp (both at warp speeds, moving towards each other), Enterprise calmly blows it away with a phaser shot.
OOOh, amazing....
"The Ultimate Computer" - during the final wargames exercise, M-5 goes bezerk. It suddenly jumps to warp 4, and strafes the fleet which is at sublight, with full phasers. The opposing ships, who's shields have been jacked down to 10% normal, take damage. Enterprise then pulls a tight 180, and corckscrews through the fleet formation at warp 7. Starship Excalibur takes repeated hits, and is declared dead - the entire crew is dead, but the ship itself is perfectly intact. Commodore Wesely pulls the rest of the ships back, and prepares to go in at full power, and destroy the rogue Enterprise, and they also jump to warp to engage.
Where is it stated that the fleet is at sublight? The scene clearly shows they are at warp. And why is it so amazing that one ship had dead crew but no visible damage? In "Balance of Terror", we saw no damage but the crew was suffering from radiation damage from simple NUKES.
"The Omega Glory" - on the ground, using a single phaser pistol and a handful of power packs, kills *thousands* of charging barbarian hordes easily. To save the town from the oncoming horde, he asks Kirk for four phaser pistols and three extra power packs each. "They sacrificed hundreds of warriors, just to lure us out into the open," he says, "then they came, and they came, and they came. We cut down thousands of them, and still they came." It's worth noting that the barbarians in this case did possess archers and basic smoothbore muskets...
And this proves what exactly? This has nothing to do with any starships, and doesn't address the fact that Tracy was accompanied by Coms during this raid, and wasn't alone.
"Elaan of Troyus" - The Enterprise is sabotaged by one of the Dohlman's guards, who is in the pay of the Klingons. They are stuck at sublight, trying to fend off a Klingon ship which remains at warp. On emergency power only, they manage to maintain the shields for several passes of the Klingon battlecruiser. Then they find out the Dohlman's necklace is made of raw dilithium, and giving them to Scotty, five minutes later, they pull up partial main power, jump to warp, and cripple the Klingon ship with their opening barrage.
Ooohhh... THAT's never happened before....
"Is There in Truth No Beauty?" - Third time through the galactic barrier - they apparently got so far from the Milky Way before Larry Marvick was stopped, that they required extremely precise navigation to return.
More Red Herrings. An insane man flew them into the Barrier, and only a Medusan (in the body of Spock) was able to get them out again. Note the
normal crew COULDN'T do this.
"For the World is Hollow, And I Have Touched the Sky" - The Enterprise is diverted to destroy an asteroid on a collision course with Daran V. The Asteroid ship Yonada, which they continue to believe they can easily destroy if need-be, is large enough that from the interior, it resembles a planetary surface. Producing the title, at one point, a man staggers in, and says, "Even though it was forbidden, I climbed the western mountains. They have lied to us! For the world is hollow, and I have touched the sky!"
Yet when faced with an ACTUAL asteroid in "The Paradise Syndrome" Spock cripples the
Enterprise in an attempt to destroy it....
"Day of the Dove" - Fourth trip through the galactic barrier...
Again due to alien influence...
"That Which Survives" - The Enterprise is hurled some 990.7 light-years from the planet where the landing party is stranded. The trip damaged the Enterprise's engines, and Spock notes that at their maximum sustainable warp, Warp 8.4, it will take 11 hours to return to the planet.
And again, Spock is probably wrong in his numbers, since a defense program named Losira sabotages the engines, which sends the ship hurtling through space at high warp, and out of control. Spock estimates that the crew has only "14.87 minutes" left before the ship explodes. Scotty works madly trying to remedy the problem by working on the magnetic containment field holding the antimatter. As Scott begins repairs, Spock tells him he has "8 minutes, 41 seconds" left. Soon the countdown to the imminent destruction of the Enterprise comes and goes-- and nothing happens. If Spock is so precise with his calculations, why was Scott able to work for at least ten seconds after Spock said the ship would explode?
"Let That Be Your Last Battlefield" - Under the control of Bele, the Enterprise travels to Cheron, 90,000 light-years distant, in under two days.
Yup, AGAIN, under alien control...
"Whom Gods Destroy" - the planet is shielded, and Kirk and Spock are trapped within the penal colony. Scotty states that the Enterprise can batter down the shields, but that the backwash would destroy everything on the surface, even if the firing point is on the opposite side of the planet, where the shield is weakest. In the meantime, Garth shows off a chemical explosive - a piece smaller than a grain of sand vaporizes an Orion slave girl, and generates a sizable earthquake. Garth states that if he drops the 20 oz bottle of the stuff, that it would vaporize the entire planet.
And Garth is of course,
INSANE. He just escaped imprisonment, so when did he have time to set up a research lab and develop such an expolsive at a PRISON colony?