They're pretty specific about the '3 days from earth' thing and the warp 7 speed, so it is definitely not STL travel.NecronLord wrote:The enterprise was able to drop it's warp drive once within Vejur's influence, the Klingons would have done the same.kmart wrote: I recall that you actually see the warp engines turn off on the klingon ships toward the end of the opening shot, so they seem to drop out of warp without any change in perspective or velocity.It makes less sense for the thing to be travelling STL and be able to outrun all of starfleet and cross from Klingon to Federation space in a matter of days at most.Doesn't make any sense if the thing is going warp 7 for the klingons to drop out of warp to approach it, but that is just like the cloud situation later on, which also doesn't makes sense, (as Dykstra pointed out) that the cloud hits epsilon 9 at warp 7 and yet still manages to take awhile to eat it.
As for Enterprise dropping out of warp ... there's no indication to me the ship drops warp until it gets seized in the tractor beam ... in fact the warp engine inboard fx are visible in a few cuts during the passage over it, as well as the shots when it approaches the cloud. The whole idea of flying a few hundred meters over an object wouldn't seem so daunting unless it was being done while trying to match warp speeds, so I have always figured they were at warp 7 or thereabouts right up till when they get dragged in, which is when they disengage warp engines (presumably once inside, you don't need engines to stationkeep.) The early draft script (the Roddenberry one) makes specific reference to the warp maneuver necessary to intercept and pace the thing, and I think that stuff is in the novelization as well.