Junghalli wrote:
Spacebeard wrote:I don't think eight Borg cubes would be a match for an Executor-class ship, which stood up to several Star Destroyers colliding with it when exiting hyperspace, and you said yourself they aren't canon. You might as well start making up Star Trek ships yourself to throw against the Empire.
I'm not sure how a fusion cube stacks up to an SSD volumetrically. The
Executor's much longer, but also much thinner. The lack of armor will cost the fusion cube, but that's sort of made up for by the way the Borg distribute vital systems all over the ship meaning their ships are very hard to kill short of pulverizing them completely. OK, I'll give you that an SSD>fusion cube, but it would take a lot of damage killing one. A tactical fusion cube might do better, it
is armored. Anyway, as you said they're not canon.
Borg ships
do have critical points which can cause a chain reaction when they are hit. See again STFC, when the Borg cube was destroyed by internal explosions after the Federation fleet poured all of their firepower onto one spot noticed by Picard. See also Voyager's "Endgame", in which the Borg ships taken out by the "transphasic" torpedoes are clearly destroyed by internal explosions set off
after the torpedo has detonated.
OK, for purposes of the OP we bump up Borg shields so they can resist non frequency dependent weapons and let's leave it at that.
I was already operating under the assumption that the Star Trek and Star Wars shields and weapons were roughly equalized, including the Borg. Weapons which have equivalent firepower to Federation weapons relative to Borg shields but do not oscillate on and off on some frequency will have a much easier time penetrating Borg shields since they won't "adapt" to them.
Spacebeard wrote:If they couldn't do this, then they couldn't fire torpedoes with their shields up.
I can think of a couple of ways. I think it's more that ST weapons designers are fucking morons (as has been proven again and again).
(1) Stick the top of the torpedo launcher out of the shield envelope.
We don't have any evidence that they can do this. Either way, we don't see it on the ships of any Star Trek empire, so I'd wager there's a reason why. Maybe torpedo launchers which jut outside the shield bubble are quickly destroyed by enemy fire, for instance.
(2) Flicker and fire system: shut down the shield just before firing, raise it immediately afterwards.
This is what they do for the phasers, hence the frequencies. But since torpedoes are physical objects which take an appreciable amount of time to pass outside the ship's shield bubble, they would have to drop the shields for a substantial fraction of a second, quite long enough for an enemy to take advantage and rake them.
Spacebeard wrote:See First Contact, where massed Starfleet ships took out a Borg cube. I imagine that an Imperator-class star destroyer, which as stated above in this thread is fourteen times the size of a Federation Galaxy-class with many more weapons, could probably match the firepower from the STFC fleet.
There were hundreds of starships at FC IIRC. With equal pound for pound firepower a Borg cube is much more powerful than a single ISD.
We definitely didn't see "hundreds" of Starfleet ships onscreen. The main site here says "dozens", and if I recall correctly the
Enterprise-E was the largest of them.
An
Imperator is far larger than the largest ship built by Starfleet, and it packs more weapons for its size than any ship in Starfleet. With the Borg unable to "adapt" to Imperial weapons, a star destroyer could quickly destroy a cube's tractor beam and cutting beam emplacements as they are fired, as the
Enterprise-D did in "Best of Both Worlds", except without the laborious rotation of phaser frequencies, and each hit would cut huge holes in the cube, just as the
Enterprise-D's weapons did in "Q Who?". I imagine judicious use of an ISD's TIE fighters would come in handy, also: with the firepower equalized I don't know how much damage they could do, but "Best of Both Worlds" shows us that the Borg are susceptible to being distracted, and we've never seen them targeting two ships at the same time, only switching rapidly between targets.
And, of course, debating one-on-one duels isn't very meaningful, since the Empire's speed advantage will allow them to pick and choose their battles, engaging only when they have an advantage in numbers.