
And, for the last time,
"STOP POKING ME!"
~Orc, Warcraft Series
Moderator: Vympel
*poke*Badme wrote:Treknology at its finest. You can't believe how hard I laughed when this 'planet killer' may take houndreds of years to kill one measly planet
And, for the last time,
"STOP POKING ME!"
~Orc, Warcraft Series
Then get a post count over 50. You're not even half way there yet.Badme wrote:And, for the last time,
"STOP POKING ME!"
~Orc, Warcraft Series
But do different beam weapons ( it's not even a beam ) on the same ship always have the same effectsDarth Servo wrote:Leap in logic. Different beam weapons on different ships have different colors but the same effect.
But we've only seen ONE actual attack from V-Ger and it did the exact same thing to the Klingon ships as it did to the much larger Fed space station. In order to show that the yellow balls-o-death would have a different effect, you need EVIDENCE. Since we never actually saw them do their job, you have NO evidence.The Nomad wrote:But do different beam weapons ( it's not even a beam ) on the same ship always have the same effects? That's leap in logic too.
I watched the end of it this morning and it pretty much said that from their "equa-distant" positions that they could "devastate the surface of the planet". It was also said that they would hit in about 37 minutes due to their low decay rate of their orbits. They were fired as a way to get Kirk to "disclose the information" as to why V'Ger's creator had not responded. If V'Ger wanted to take out the Earth, it could have easily done so in minutes if we take the quote as what they would literally do to the surface.Darth Wong wrote:I believe that at the end of the movie, it unveiled its Doomsday weapon: a lot of glowing energy balls that would circulate around the planet and sterilize its surface (I think it would have taken about an hour, but it's been many years since I saw the film).
Mind you, since a single ISD can do the same thing, this is not exactly the sort of thing which will terrify the Death Star.
There's just one problem Mike. The satelite itself was launched over three hundred years before the events seen in TMP. It had already "digitized" whole planets, stars, and galaxies in this timespan in its quest for gathering information. Perhaps it used some other method? If so, wouldn't it make sense that it use this method on something the size of the Death Star?Darth Wong wrote:Good point. Let's say it takes 10 seconds to "digitize" a GCS. That would be a rate of around 650,000 cubic metres per second (assuming a GCS volume is 6.5E6 m^3). Now, let's extrapolate that to digitizing the Earth's 510 million square km surface area to a depth of 10 metres (thus ignoring surface structures taller than 10 metres or anything buried deeper than 10 metres). At that rate, it would take roughly ... two hundred and fifty years.Darth Servo wrote:Why would the time be so short? When V-ger digitized the Klingon ships and the Fed Space station, it tood several seconds and thats just a few hundred meters. How much longer would this effect take to cover the surface of the earth?The Nomad wrote:I don't recall this. The balls divided and were to strike Earth's surface in a single volley. The actual destruction would have been very short, it took only time to deploy them.
So, even if it fires off a hundred of these things and each one is a thousand times more powerful than the one which struck the Klingon ship, we're still looking at a timeframe of more than 20 hours.
I think this thing would have a helluva time dealing with an ISD, never mind the Death Star.
Or perhaps you're just making an insane leap in logic from "picture of planet in its archives" to "must have annihilated an entire planet". This has been pointed out many times in this thread, and no one has addressed it except to ignore it and repeat their illogical claim that a picture = proof of annihilation of the object represented.Vertigo1 wrote:There's just one problem Mike. The satelite itself was launched over three hundred years before the events seen in TMP. It had already "digitized" whole planets, stars, and galaxies in this timespan in its quest for gathering information. Perhaps it used some other method? If so, wouldn't it make sense that it use this method on something the size of the Death Star?
Hey, I'm just taking it as I see it. There is no proof that they weren't annihilated in the same manner, yet no proof that they were so where does that leave us OTHER than to make leaps of logic?Darth Wong wrote:Or perhaps you're just making an insane leap in logic from "picture of planet in its archives" to "must have annihilated an entire planet". This has been pointed out many times in this thread, and no one has addressed it except to ignore it and repeat their illogical claim that a picture = proof of annihilation of the object represented.
ROTFLMAO!!! "There is no proof that they weren't annihilated"; how about conservation of mass/energy, dumb-ass? Where did the mass/energy go? Into V'ger? Do you realize the gravity well this thing should have been generating if it had the mass/energy of whole fucking galaxies in it? It should have been a black hole, for fuck's sake. And the best you can do is say that there's a picture of a galaxy and we can't prove this was NOT proof of total annihilation?Vertigo1 wrote:Hey, I'm just taking it as I see it. There is no proof that they weren't annihilated in the same manner, yet no proof that they were so where does that leave us OTHER than to make leaps of logic?Darth Wong wrote:Or perhaps you're just making an insane leap in logic from "picture of planet in its archives" to "must have annihilated an entire planet". This has been pointed out many times in this thread, and no one has addressed it except to ignore it and repeat their illogical claim that a picture = proof of annihilation of the object represented.
So from a bunch of ambiguous quotes you draw the conclusion that V-ger would "instantly" sterilize the entire planet? The danger couldn't possibly be due to the possibility of the Feds lacking the ability to stop the reaction once it started and most people wouldn't be able to get off the planet? Besides, the Feds are so squeamish that even the threat a few peorple being killed is enough to force their hand.Vertigo1 wrote:I watched the end of it this morning and it pretty much said that from their "equa-distant" positions that they could "devastate the surface of the planet". It was also said that they would hit in about 37 minutes due to their low decay rate of their orbits. They were fired as a way to get Kirk to "disclose the information" as to why V'Ger's creator had not responded. If V'Ger wanted to take out the Earth, it could have easily done so in minutes if we take the quote as what they would literally do to the surface.
Keep in mind that tactical displays often show things out of scale for the benefit of the viewer. Therefore, any scaling from it isn't all that reliable. Is there a pic of the actual balls themselves around the Earth?I also took the liberty of doing a little pixel scaling, based on the tactical picture I posted earlier. I'll post them when I get the opportunity.
Are you talking about the cloud or the ship itself? It doesn't NEED to scan inside the ship to know where to shoot. This is a fight, not your typical Federation"Lets try and talk the threatening alien out of killing us" crap.One last thing. WOULD the Death Star even be able to scan inside V'Ger?
The sensors were disrupted only when the cloud was around the ship. Once the cloud was gone, their sensors worked just fine. If the could is there, most competant military officers would assueme the ship is in the center of the cloud and know where to shoot.Keep in mind that I'm not saying that the Death Star's sensors are inferior to that of the Enterprise's, but all scans by Enterprise were reflected back. All comm traffic was jammed when they went inside (until they were in orbit of Earth).
Even if it was some kine of defensive mechanism, just because rendered torps useless, this would make the thing immune to any and all weapons, regardless of firepower? Get real. Stop extrapolationg things to infinity.As for turbolasers, would they have any effect? From the beginning of the film, the klingons fired their torpedoes into the cloud. Judging from what was shown on the klingon's tactical screen, the torpedoes screamed to a halt and just vanished. Could this be some kind of defense mechanism, and would it have the same effect on turbolasers?
12 order what? Without units, the quote is meaningless.DocHorror wrote:V-Gers power levels are said to be 12 order
Nitpick: The cloud part was 2AU in diameter.DocHorror wrote:Some facts about V-Ger:
It was 78km long.
It displacement was estimated as being 6 million times that of the Enterprise.
The cloud it projects was 82 (IIRC) AU in diameter, the novel states it could hold a star system within it.
V-Gers power levels are said to be 12 order (again the novel states that 12 order power is enough to stop the sun from rotating)
Im not arguing either way, just adding some facts...
So what is the 82 AU that everyone keeps bringing up?Vertigo1 wrote:Nitpick: The cloud part was 2AU in diameter.
Definately didn't "digitize" a galaxy.DocHorror wrote:Some facts about V-Ger:
It was 78km long.
It displacement was estimated as being 6 million times that of the Enterprise.
That is not a fact. The novel is noncanon.The cloud it projects was 82 (IIRC) AU in diameter, the novel states it could hold a star system within it.
V-Gers power levels are said to be 12 order (again the novel states that 12 order power is enough to stop the sun from rotating)
Im not arguing either way, just adding some facts...
Roddenbury wrote the novel. How is it non-canon?Grand Admiral Thrawn wrote:Definately didn't "digitize" a galaxy.DocHorror wrote:Some facts about V-Ger:
It was 78km long.
It displacement was estimated as being 6 million times that of the Enterprise.The cloud it projects was 82 (IIRC) AU in diameter, the novel states it could hold a star system within it.
That is not a fact. The novel is noncanon.V-Gers power levels are said to be 12 order (again the novel states that 12 order power is enough to stop the sun from rotating)
Im not arguing either way, just adding some facts...
http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/features/ ... h=digitizeBritannica.com wrote: Main Entry: dig·i·tize
Pronunciation: 'di-j&-"tIz
Function: transitive verb
Inflected Form(s): -tized; -tiz·ing
Date: 1953
: to convert (as data or an image) to digital form
I could be wrong, but neither of those definitions seem to involve converting matter into energy and "digitizing" it, just the data they obtain about a planet (such as images).Encarta.com wrote: dig·i·tize [ díjji tz ] (past dig·i·tized, past participle dig·i·tized, present participle dig·i·tiz·ing, 3rd person present singular dig·i·tiz·es)
transitive verb
convert to digital form: to convert an image, graph, or other data into digital form for processing on a computer
I don't recall seeing images of the "digitized" Klingon starships in V'Ger's archive. Why then should I associate V'Ger's weaponry with its records?Vertigo1 wrote: Hey, I'm just taking it as I see it. There is no proof that they weren't annihilated in the same manner, yet no proof that they were so where does that leave us OTHER than to make leaps of logic?