He was rather nice and polite, and his arguments weren't so strong, so I had no problem taking on him by myself.
Till he started massively quoting Mr. Stars firepower calcs!
The problem is that I'm not much of a physics genius (in other words the numbers were to big and started to hurt my brain ), and that I'm relatively new to this site, and to the whole SW vs. ST thing, so I don't know what's up with said Mr. Star, other than the fact that he's mentally unstable!
The only thing I remember from my short visits to his site is the conclusion that since phasers don't seem to have any obvious aiming devices, redshirts probably have some kind of sensors in their eyes that automatically direct their phaser beams! Go figure ...
Here's my frined's last reply. Since he screwed up quoting me properly, I'll put his replies in bold.
Any help with this mess would be appreciated!dragoon1940 wrote:"It's from the novels and comics. They are "C" grade canon."
Indeed. Cloaking devices are never actually seen in the movies and/or novelizations. However, Needa infers that only larger ships can use them (or have the power to).
"There's no way they're gonna dodge TL bolts."
If their weapons are accurate enough. Maximum range for the Falcon's small quad laser seems to be about 200-500 meters. The cap ships, of course, ahve much longer ranges, probably a few dozen klicks (maximum range we've ever seen them engage in at all in the movies and novelizations). Even then, the Trade Federation droid gunners couldn't his a 76-meter long, shiny yacht with virtually no ECM capabilities that was right on top of them.
"There's a difference between "less effective" and "less automated".
It's a very bad thing for a warship to be as heavily automated and as centralized as an UFP ship.
Computer can be hacked, destroyed, and infected by viruses. A human operator is far more reliable. There was an episode when a Galaxy class vessel was destroyed when a computer virus disabled the anti-matter containment fields.
Nothing like this could ever happen onboard of an Imperial vessel, since it's main functions are solely depended on human operators.
It's even a bigger problem when the computer is linked throughout the whole ship.
In that case the enemy has to take over a very small portion of the ship in order to gain control over it. How many times do we see a ship in ST being captured by a handful of men who take over the bridge?
Obviously, there is no such threats for the Imperial ships- their computers are decentralized and are not depended from each other.
A decentralized vessel could continue operating even if one section have fallen to the enemy.
So thousands of men running your ship is better than one computer."
However, the ST computers can be locked out efectively, as seen in episodes and in FIrst Contact. I fail to see how automation is a problem. There have been only a few examples of that working against the Federation's advantage. All the other times it gives them a massive computing, communications and sensor advantage, as it can process tons of information at once.
"Proof? Every time there is a major naval battle in, there is combat jamming mentioned. The movie novelizations mention it. The ICS mentions it."
Do you have specific passages, etc? Although I seem to remember something from the Battle of Yavin...Not sure, though.
"ICS. The Acclamator heacy TL' produce 200 gigatos per shot for every of it's twelve barrels.
And that's a simple troop carrier. Actual capships are far, far more powerful!"
False. According to the movie novelization (and hence higher canon) the turbolaser blasts exchanged in the battle over Couruscant were 'powerful enough to vaporize small towns'. Of course, you have to define a small town. Since we're talkinrea of abog about American writers, we'll use the American definition. Let's say a circle with a diameter of 6 kilometers.
Let's then start by seeing how much energy it would take to vaporize someone standing at the edge of this town. It takes about 162 megajoules (equivalent to about 39 kilos of TNT) to vaporize an average human being of about 60 kilograms.
Well, this oculd take awhile, so I'm going to quote from st-v-sw.net, who's arguement I am currently borrowing for this. As such:
'The frontal area of a human being is roughly 1.8 meters times .5 meters, or .9m². However, since not everyone would be facing the center of the blast or standing, we'll use an average value of .7 meters squared.
Since we already know the desired amount of energy to throw at this .7m² target, all we have to do is work backward via the inverse square law to know the total energy of the turbolaser. Using S / 4r² = I (where S is the energy at the center of the expanding sphere and I is the intensity), or for our purposes S = I (4r²), let's ponder the data. The intensity at 3000 meters is 162MJ divided by .7m², or 231.4 MJ/m². The square of 3000 meters is 9,000,000 m². That figure times 4 equals 113,097,335.53, and we thus multiply this figure times 231.4 MJ to determine the energy at the center. That value is:
26,170,723,441.5 MJ
26,170,723.4 GJ
26,170.7 TJ
That figure represents an enormous amount of energy. Deposited in one second, it would be the equivalent of 261,707,000,000,000 (261.7 trillion) 100 watt light bulbs.
However, compared to more energetic objects it seems rather less impressive. After all, a ton of TNT releases an estimated 4.184 gigajoules, and this is the figure used when calculating the explosive tonnage of an item. Converting our result from earlier into tons, we find that the energy required to vaporize a person at three kilometers is just 6.25 megatons. To be sure, this is nothing to sneeze at, and it seems more than a little absurd to find such a value disappointing.'
So, your turbolaser blasts are in fact in the megaton range, not the gigaton as you like to claim. Even if we consider twenty years of tech advancement, I doubt the power would have increased much beyond 7 or 8 megatons.
My thanks to [link]
"Yes, but where do we see them actually do it?"
I again refer you to Memory Alpha, wherein all information is based entirely on the Star Trek canon.
[link]
"But we still don't see them being used at any significant ranges or being very accurate, nor do we see those things on top of it ever being used as scopes. And they still don't have full auto."
Who needs full auto when you can set your beam to a cone or a flat plane and kill everyone in front of you?
Furthermore, I might add that a small team armed only with phaser pistols wiped out hundreds (if not thousands) of enemy troops in the TOS episode "Omega Glory". Of course, they were primitives armed with short range weapons, but the mass charge tactics of the Clone Wars certainly wouldn't work against Federation ground troops.
"It just says it can damage alloys. Nowhere does it says where do we see such an effect."
It says it can 'vaporize'.
"In fact, in several episodes we see people hide behind light cover, packing crates, etc., and no one ever tries to set the phasers to higher setting in order to cut through the cover."
Ah, this arguement. In fact, in a DS9 episode by the name of "Who Mourns for Morn" a character jumps into a packing crate to use as cover and is disconcerted to find phaser blasts coming through the sides.
"Blaster on the other hand are far more consistent- they burn through metal and flash alike."
They don't burn through them they just leave scorch marks on the walls. Or blow up control panels.
"But the problem is not the phasers, but the lack of any kind of support weaponry- no machineguns, no grenades, no mortars, no armed ground vehicles, no air support, no nothing!"
They actually have artillery in the form of photon grenades and a photon grenade launcher (much like a mortar). Photon grenades can be used to either stun or kill and seem to pack quite a punch.
There is also evidence of personal and portable force fields (discussed in DS9) and used on screen in both movies and in several TV series. In addition, Federation troops do appear to wear some sort of armor (See DS9) that can at least absorb some of the energy fro ma disruptor shot.
In Star Trek V Federation crewmembers also use portable blast shields ( much like moder day police tactical shields). We have also seen them use binoculars, etc. I naddition, they have the tricorder, which combines amnye elements of modern day GPS, tracking devices, sensors etc in to one neat little package.
"It's not home to ST canon, it's just a Wiki section dedicated for ST!"
All information on Memory-Alpha is taken from the movies and TV shows, hence it is canon. Memory-Beta includes information from liscensed but not canon novels, games, etc.
To return to space combat for a moment:
In the Voyager episode "Rise" Voyager destroys a asteriod which (when measured by scaling from the torpedo used) appears to be 390 meters long and about 200-250 meters wide. It is not totally destroyed by the torpedo, but that is only because it was not (as expected by the crew) to be nickel-iron composite but was articially made with tritanium as well as the standrd nickel-iron composite (this implys that without the triatnium it would have been totally vaporized). If you do the math neccessary to figure out how much energy is needed to vaporize a asteriod aactually made of nickel-iron (as was expected by the crew) you arrive at a low-end yield of roughly 100 gigatons.
Even if we accept the widly inflated claim of 200 gigaton turbolaser shots, the phonto torpedo can compete with that quite easily (not to mention the quantum torpedo, which has roughly twice the power of a photon and is currently replacing the photon torpedo in Starfleet servce).
Explaining the hyperdrive would take way too long, so here's a site that can:
[link]
Much thanks to this site and its author for providing me with information and counters to the typical arguements presented by the pro-Wars side (including the detestable SD.net).
Also much thanks to Memory-Alpha and its contributors.
Especially with Darkstar's quotes...
I have to admit that before he started using Darkstar's quotes he sounded
a lot more reasonable and his arguments were better thought-out.
Here's a link
to the original containing our exchange, but the message boards on that site are a mess!
If you really have to see how it started, I can only advise you to look for the longest posts, or to stay away from it completely.
I'm really sorry for this horrible, long and boring mess, and thank you in advance!