on ASVS. I didn't realize it until they posted the link at the bottom of their
quotation-mark-less quoting, so I replied to it. Then, I saw your page, and
figured you might want to make the appropriate corrections.
> We saw its [the phaser cannon's] anti-armour mode in "The Cage", and we
> heard dialogue suggestive of its anti-infantry capabilities in "The Omega
> Glory". In that episode, Captain Tracy told Kirk that his men drained four
> of their phasers in order to kill "thousands" of attacking Yangs (a
classic
> scenario for a defensive HMG). One might assume that he refers to regular
> hand phasers rather than heavy weapons like the stabilized gun in "The
Cage"
> or the large rifle in "Where No Man Has Gone Before", but that is a
bizarre
> and unjustifiable interpretation, for several reasons:
> 1.. No Visual Evidence: We never saw this battle or the drained phasers.
We saw the drained phasers. They were pistols. Enterprise personnel also
found drained phaser power packs, which were little things that would have
fit in the pistols. That is how they came to suspect Tracey.
> We know that heavier weapons do exist, and would be appropriate for a
> large-scale battle. Therefore, there is no reason to assume that they must
> have used hand phasers. It is questionable even to assume that they
probably
> used hand phasers; is Captain Tracy had a starship, he probably had access
> to the same kind of weapons that Captain Pike and Captain Kirk did, so why
> wouldn't he have used them?
When would he have had them beamed down, and who would have done the
beaming? His crew was dying of a plague, and if they were as honorable as
the Enterprise crew, they would not have beamed him heavy artillery on a
pre-warp world. Besides, it was only after his crew died that he started
learning of how old the people there were, and got his crazy idea of the
planet being a fountain of youth, and that he had to defend the village from
the Yangs.
> 2.. Human ergonomics: Handguns have an extremely limited effective range
> because of the limitations of a human being trying to aim a one-handed
> weapon. These limitations will be just as important in the 23rd century as
> they are today; as Khan Noonian Singh pointed out in "Space Seed", there
may
> have been technical advancement in the 23rd century, but man himself has
not
> changed at all. If thousands of primitives charged at men armed only with
> handguns, they would overrun the defenders in short order because the
> defenders' weaponry would be ineffective until the attackers are already
> within range for primitive weapons like spears and arrows.
Modern handguns have a very limited effective range, but that is a problem
with short barrels and slow projectiles. Two hands are better than one,
but if you're firing a beam weapon with a visible beam, you get instant
targeting feedback and can adjust your aim. You also don't have to worry
about the bullet dropping due to gravity. You'll do a lot better, and have
much better effective range, limited only by line of sight and steady hands.
Of course, Tracey was overrun eventually. The Yangs sacrificed hundreds to
draw him into the open, and then started pouring toward him in more
thousands. He said something like "and they came, and they came... we
killed thousands of them, and still they came!"
Between Tracey and the Enterprise party (minus one that Tracey vaporized,
including phaser), there were a maximum of four phaser pistols observed on
the planet. Tracey could only have used two at a time, so one or two
inexperienced Kohms were also firing. If each phaser killed 500 men (total
two thousand, satisfying "thousands"), that is not a bad day's work.
> 3.. Power Packs: Phaser power packs were found in the hands of dead
Yangs,
> but TOS-era hand phasers have integral fuel cells rather than removable
> ammunition clips, as we saw in "The Galileo Seven" where Scotty's phaser
> discharge procedure required the entire phaser rather than removable power
> packs. So if their hand phasers had integral fuel cells, then what were
> these phaser power packs used for? Obviously, for an entirely different
type
> of phaser, such as a sustained-fire weapon like that seen in "The Cage".
No, that doesn't hold water. The Cage weapon was powered from orbit.
Remember Spock on the Enterprise saying their circuits were heating?
Besides, if those little phaser handles were charging something that big,
I'd be impressed.
Also, Scotty's discharge move might not have been because the power packs
were integral. It could just as easily have been the only way he had handy
at the time to discharge them, since I doubt shuttles usually would have a
"plug your phaser in here" port.
It is worth mentioning here that Wah Chang designed the phasers with power
packs in mind. The handles were removable power packs. The only time we
actually see handles without phasers is Omega Glory. There's a good
article on racprops.com, but I can't get it to pull up right now. You might
want to try it, though: www.racprops.com/issue1/firstphasers/pg5.php
> 4.. Yang Bodies: The bodies of dead Yangs were left on the battlefield
> after the massacre. Early TOS-era hand phasers did not appear to have as
> many attenuation settings as later models. They appeared to have only two
> settings: stun and kill. Moreover, those are the only settings we ever
heard
> mentioned by any of the characters on the show. Since the Yangs' bodies
did
> not disappear, this strongly suggests that a weapon other than a hand
phaser
> was used.
Yeah, but we also saw a phaser on widebeam in "Enemy Within". Widebeam
plus kill could equal bodies. Or maybe he stunned them a long long time.

(See also "heating rocks" . . . that's gotta be a setting in between stun
and kill.)
> It's logically obvious that Captain Tracy must have used large weapons on
No, it is logically obvious that he didn't, because he never had the chance
to get anything bigger than what he had, which was a simple pistol. If he
had the opportunity to gear up, I would have expected him to get some photon
grenades, too, but they aren't mentioned either.