Since Sov has two posts up since I last answered him, I'm just going to combine the two for simplicity's sake.
First off, while you're getting your ass kicked in this thread how about tackling
these ones too...
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=12237
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=12143
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=8862
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=7663
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=6131
http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic.php?t=4769
heh.
the usual hit-and-run suspect wrote:The Scene was,
a Battle (emphasis mine - Beyond Hope) and then the report. 8 Planets destroyed, 312 vessels disabled, 4,000,621 Borg eliminated. It had to have been
8 Planets Destroyed in one battle(emphasis mine again - Beyond Hope), not in 5 months.
>>Irrelevant Pic Snipped. Resistance is Futile.
-Beyond Hope <<
Who said the Borg require habitable worlds? It has been shown that drones can survive in space, I am sure they could survive on a not atmosphere planet. Plus the borg said, "Matrix 010, grid 19."
there is no evidence to say it was in one solar system.(emphasis again mine - Beyond Hope)
First- The drones can survive in a vaccuum, however cubes have a breathable atmosphere as demonstrated by the fact that Starfleet crew have beamed onto them on several occasions without explosively decompressing. Further, when the drones begin assimilating the Enterprise-E in First Contact they altered the life support settings. Evidently the Borg
do have a certain climate they find more comfortable, or such a change would be "irrelevant." My presumption would be that continuing to function in a vaccuum drains a drone's energy supplies at a faster rate. Whatever the reason, Borg cubes
do maintain an atmosphere and the Borg have in the past altered the atmosphere of a ship they're assimilating.
Second- Where do you think the raw materials to build the cubes are coming from? Borg require planets as a source of raw materials. Whether Borg worlds serve other functions or whether they are merely massive stripmines has not (to my knowledge) been established by the show. However, the simple fact remains that the Borg cannot simply build cubes out of nothing. This point is substantianted by two simple facts: one, that the Borg cubes are attempting to defend the planet the 8-balls are shown destroying, and two that the collective takes notice of the loss of 8 worlds. If the planets were of no importance to the Borg, they would be "irrelevant" and neither defended nor their loss remarked on.
Third- You're alternately trying to claim that this incursion was one battle and then claiming it wasn't. Which, exactly, is it?
Fourth- This is not the first time that the "Borg don't need planets" argument has been tried on this board, and by smarter trolls than you.
The Lawnmower Man wrote:The ringed explosion can be seen after the Planets destruction, the DS could not have been pounded on by any such debris. Compared to the Borg planet's destruction.
You missed the chunks of the planet also seen speeding away from the explosion in all directions in that scene? Or maybe you missed the implications of the Millenium Falcon coming out of lightspeed right into the middle of a debris field? The Death Star was without a doubt hit by debris from the blast and was undamaged. Deal with it.
Captain Clueless wrote:Could they hit a swarm of fast moving targets? What would they do if S8472 came out behind the superlaser, or fired on the superlaser itself before the DS could start shooting? Are Lasers even capable of hurting a Bioship? Bioships are ALMOST immune to energy attacks. Say what you want about how much energy is flowing threw those Lasers, but it is still an energy weapon.
Last time I checked, Borg disruptors were energy weapons. An unknown number of hits from those left a bioship drifting in space while it healed. The heavy turbolasers on the Death Star's surface are much more powerful than a Borg disruptor. They are capable of hitting a 12.5 meter long X-wing fighter. Are you seriously trying to claim that a 200-odd meter bioship (approximately 16 times larger) will be
more difficult to hit? Also I note that you never replied to my comment about the difference in the number of weapons the Death Star carries vs. the number on a bioship (tens of thousands to 1.) Assuming only 10,000 guns and assuming only a quarter can target the bioships at any one time, that's still 2,500 turbolasers for the 8-balls to try and avoid. In the words of Trinity from The Matrix:
"Dodge THIS!"
The Dark Lord of the Unwarranted Assumption wrote:The DS is a sitting duck easy to hit target, Bioships are not.
The Death Star has shields capable of surviving the impact of high-velocity debris from an exploding world. Bioships do not. It can thus weather attacks with impunity while sheltering an entire Imperial fleet under it's guns. Let's see 9 200-meter long bioships do
that.
Forrest Sov wrote:Bioships are made to destroy worlds not conqure them. Besides, howmany good men went out with DS 1 and 2 because of the amount they can hold?
Thank you for agreeing with me. The Death Star is designed to do
more than just detonate planets. If you needed a planet
occupied the Death Star can do it with ease. The bioships can only destroy planets, not conquer and hold them.
As to the second half, millions: a drop in the bucket compared to how many in the ST galaxy would die trying to oppose the might of the Empire
nano-brain wrote:Whats the big deal about Nanoprobes? Who said SW technology cant be affected by Nanoprobes?
You don't understand the problem involved in a tiny little machines the size of one of your cells successfully destroying a 200 meter long warship? The explosion of the torpedo warhead alone should have destroyed the nanites. If that didn't do it, they should never have survived impact on the bioships. Apparently bioships have no resistance to small, fast-moving physical objects since not only did the nanoprobes survive but they penetrated the hull as well. This would never happen with a Star Wars ship: the nanites would hit the particle shields harmlessly and be destroyed.
The Ass-imilated Rabid Trekkie wrote:How do you know it wasnt? Besides, I put even if it wasnt alone. It would have been hit several times at least by a Borg cube.
Why does this bit about the bioship having been pounded on stink? Oh wait, I know... Sov pulled it out of his ass. There is no visual of the battle in which that bioship was damaged and you have
NO basis to assume it was "pounded on" or even "hit several times."
Old Yeller wrote:Nine ships compared to a GIANT MOON. How could you fire on a target when you have no idea when it will come or where it will come from. I am sure in the time it takes to destroy the planet, an ISD could destroy the planet killer, but it would take time to come into range target (manually) and fire. The PK could have already shot its blast, the "Chain Reatcion" happening already, then the Planet Blows up. Could they work fast enough?
-and-
How? By the singularity? That doesnt meen anything, S8472 could just come out fight from all directions and then have the PK come out in the Chaos.
-and-
There is no way of knowing what the affect planet shields have on the PK.
Hmmm... let's see. First off, the Empire has sensors that can detect the 8-balls' little entryway as soon as it opens. An ISD can accelerate at several thousand G's or perform a quick hyperspace jump to the attacker's position. I'd say time will not be a problem in intercepting the 8-balls. Since they have to get through the shield to start the planet-destroying chain reaction and since they don't have the raw firepower to do that, though, the ISD captain's only worry will be in stomping all the roaches before they can scurry back to fluidic space.
Our Little Chew Toy wrote:Grand Admiral Thrawn originally wrote:5 mounths is roughly 150 days. That's a 18.75 days per planet destruction. The DS planned to destroy at least 2 planets a day. The DS can achieve a planet killing rate 37.5 faster than the 8472 one.
Debatable.
So debate it. Debate the other 6 threads you've run away from too while you're at it (I'm told that suffering builds character, after all.
)