Construction of ships in both verses

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Roondar
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Post by Roondar » Sun Mar 30, 2008 11:20 am

Mike DiCenso wrote:
Jedi Master Spock wrote:You still haven't read the EAS article which explains, at length, why there are almost certainly more than twelve?
Kane Starkiller wrote: Actually the only thing he provides is 7 Galaxies seen at once in Endgame so I accept that this would be a lower limit. I still see no reason why I should accept significantly larger fleets.
Actually, if you look closely at the ship firing the phaser at the Borg sphere, it looks to be an eighth GCS. So eight as a lower limit, and with the three, previously mentioned destroyed ships, plus the "dark neck" GCS varients (none of which are seen after 'Favor the Bold", it is likely there are 13 or more GCS that the Federation has built.

I am assuming you have read the article fully here and understand what it is he (Bernd) is presenting as evidence.
-Mike
The funny thing is that he is basically arguing for either very fast warp speeds or a lack of any Galaxy class cruiser out of the hot spots here. The Federation is simply too big for it to fit any other way.

Then again, Janeway did fly home at warp six-seven and expected to do 1000LY a year with that so I suppose it is possible.

Kane Starkiller
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Post by Kane Starkiller » Sun Mar 30, 2008 11:37 am

What are the distances between Federation and Cardassia? What is the time frame?

Mike DiCenso
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Post by Mike DiCenso » Mon Mar 31, 2008 1:23 am

Kane Starkiller wrote: How does any of that provide evidence that Federation can build ships larger than Galaxy? They built 600m dropped to 300m and then slowly rose back to 600m. What evidence is there for ships larger than 700m?
Because, if you had bothered to look again at the image in the link, the D'kyr class in that one screencap is about 4 times the length of the 225 meter NX-01, which means that 900 meters, or nearly so was possible, and the Federation was even around then, this was just what the Vulcans were able to do on their own.
Mike DiCenso wrote:Again wrong. The U.S. has never lost the ability to build a super-sonic bomber as evidenced by the ability to construct and maintain the fleet of B-1 Lancer bombers. Whether the U.S. will bother building a new fleet of super-sonic bombers is another matter. But The evidence at any rate points towards the Federation going more for quality advancements, not size in their starships.
Kane Starkiller wrote: Which doesn't come close to XB-70 in capability namely payload and speed. Other example is building B-52 which also doesn't exist today.
Now you're just mincing definitions. Is the B-1B Lancer a bomber or is it not? Is it an aircraft capable of super-sonic speeds? Yes to both. The capability existed for the U.S. to follow up and build a second class of large, super-sonic bomb post-XB-70. The only thing that changed was the mission requirements.

Also, the U.S. still has maintained the capability to build a large, sub-sonic bomber as witnessed by the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber. Although the stealth capability requirement necessitated a different configuration and use of composite materials, the overall size and capability of the B-2 is similar to the B-52 bombers.
Mike DiCenso wrote:It is relevant as JMS has pointed out. Your definition of "starship" is so flimsy that almost anything that can be propelled between interstellar distances at any velocity is a starship.

It is quite generous to call the Death Star a starship in the normal sense of the word. It is also telling that building a ship supposedly 100,000 times smaller than the DS1 bankrupted "several star systems". Maybe the Empire did nearly exaust it's economy after all on the Death Stars if starships are so taxing to build at a smaller scale.
Kane Starkiller wrote:It is not my definition. The only ones insisting on using their own personal definitions of starship are you. This enables you to discount Death Star as a starship even though it is. If the Executor bankrupted several starsystem then that is obviously different than nearly bankrupting the entire Empire.
No, you are the one broad-brush twisting of a dictionary definition. That JMS turned it back on you is simple tit-for-tat.
Mike DiCenso wrote:Because they are not merely "assumptions", Kane. They are carefully spelled out and numerous pieces of evidence. Circumstantal to be sure, but still they tend to point towards more than five GCS. The conclusions are unavoidable.
Kane Starkiller wrote:They are not unavoidable since it is entirely possible all those Galaxies were one and the same. You still provided no evidence they were not.
They are not unavoidable, especially when you couple that evidence with Bernd's article's evidence.
Mike DiCenso wrote:But that is still more than 5 ships, and still provides for the possibility more even more ships when coupled with the other evidence provided. I don't understand why you get more and more stringent with your demands of evidence when it is provided to you, or why you keep acting in denial.
Kane Starkiller wrote:You can pretend you showed evidence of more than 5-8 Galaxies all you wish. You haven't.


You are the one pretending here. I have shown over and over more and more evidence, and all you do is come up with excuses, or handwaving to ignore it.

Bernd's article is merely icing on the cake with the additional "dark neck" variants that are seen nowhere else in addition to the Venture's unique "bumps" on her warp nacelles.
Mike DiCenso wrote:We saw the GCS quite frequently above as well as below. None of them display the characteristic bumps of the Venture.

The fleets seem to follow a numerical order:

2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, and 10th. Seven named out of a possible ten fleets, and they seem to be proper in their numerical order.
Kane Starkiller wrote:]Did we see all five Galaxies from above at once to be able to determine none of them is Venture? Even if we have you do realize that this only pushes the number for one not to supposed large fleets of Galaxies.
Secondly US navy has five fleets: Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh.
They also appear consecutive, that doesn't mean there are no gaps.
So? Even if we were to assume the three gaps there, it still does not disclude that there are elements that have Galaxy wings in them as part of their makeup. That would be 2-3 GCS per fleet, or about 14 to 21 GCS total in Starfleet.

Mike DiCenso wrote:Near Sol-system space!? Deep within Cardassian territory!? Come on Kane. the locations speak for themselves. You provide evidence they are all the same location within a hop-skip-and-a-jump of each other.

The few canon maps place Cardassia further away than a mere few light years.
Kane Starkiller wrote: How much time passed between the final battles of the Dominion war and Endagame? Could they reach Earth within that time?
What does it matter? Why would all 8 (there are eight as per the screencap in Bernd's article) GCS be there? Were they having a GCS convention? It makes no sense, nor would it make sense that all 8 or more were sitting around within a light year of Earth just waiting for something to happen as per the dialog from "Endgame":

ADMIRAL PARIS: What the hell is it?
BARCLAY: A transwarp aperture. It's less than a light year from Earth.
OFFICER: How many Borg vessels?
BARCLAY: We can't get a clear reading, but the graviton emissions are off the scale.
ADMIRAL PARIS: I want every ship in range to converge on those co-ordinates now.
CREWWOMAN: Yes, sir


So even though this takes place about 3 years after the Dominion War in 2378, you still have to explain why all of the existing GCS in Starfleet are hanging out around within a light year of Earth. It certainly would not take that long for all of them to have battle damgage repaired, and it certainly would not take that long for redeployment to other parts of the Federation and beyond... Not unless there is a larger number of them out there. Like the "dark neck" GCS that are conspicously absent from the Endgame fleet, and the Venture with her distinctive warp nacelles.
Mike DiCenso wrote:Many times, Kane. But you keep sticking your head into the proverbial sand and saying I need to provide evidence. This is an all too common
tactic with you; beat down the opposition by claiming they have not shown any evidence, or if they do, demand more and with more stringent levels.
Kane Starkiller wrote:All I am asking is for you to observe the same evidence standard you yourself put up for Empire. You don't accept DS2 as evidence of Death Star type ship why should I accept anything more than I have seen? You assume there are more ships, you assume those are not the same ships. What is your evidence?
No you are not. You are asking for ever increasing standards. I the Death Star 2 case, I remind you that I was stating that it was theoretically possible that the Empire could have or would have desired to complete it. I even clarified that for you. Did the DS2 get completed. Yes or no? No, obviously. Could have possibily been completed. Theoretically, yes.

You on the other hand are ignoring and continuing to do so with each level of evidence provided to increase the standard of that evidence concerning the existance of more than 5 GCS. Now you are faced with at least 8 currently existing GCS and likely 10 more, given the two "dark neck GCS", and an 11th in the form of the unique varient USS Venture. We also have to deal with the practicallities of deployments. Why would all 8 GCS be sitting around for 3 years in within a light year of Earth?

That does not even include the three GCS destroyed prior to the Dominion war which would bump that number up to 11-14.
Mike DiCenso wrote:What evidence do you have that the Death Star is continuous in it's internal structure? None. In fact, the first Death Star looks rather hollow during it's early construction. That there is a primary Unicomplex may refer to there being more than one, or the main part of a single whole. But the visuals I left links to, show a vast complex, which at minimum is stated to be 600 km (at least from where the Flyer had to traverse to get from where it was inside the complex to where 7 of 9 was being held by the Queen). Not to mention there are at least "thousands" of structures, which are shown to dwarf even the cube ships shown flying around inside the Unicomplex.
Kane Starkiller wrote:We have seen Death Star from all sides as well as various blueprints and cutaway diagrams and building process from DS2. The very screencaps you link to provide evidence it was being filled up. Besides we can continue this line of reasoning for every ship. The point is Tom merely stated that signal is 600km away. No one ever stated it is the same unicomplex or that it spreads that far.
No, I would remind you that we have seen the second Death Star under a later stage of construction, while we saw the first Death Star early on, however unlike the second, there is a distinct lack of internal superstructure. The Mandel blueprints are not canon, nor even offically licensed material just as was the same with his ISD blueprints. We also have seen a distinct contradiction between the canon AoTC and RoTJ scematics of the Death Stars and most of the offical EU/ICS material.

As for the Unicomplex, I can simply turn things around to point out that neither did Paris or anyone else state that the signal was coming from 600 km away in a seperate unicomplex. In fact, in "Dark Frontier", they talk only about one unicomplex.
Mike DiCenso wrote:Why not? You brought up the analogy in the first place. I have shown that the Kuznetsov class was two completed ship hulls that are in the same approximate size class as the Nimitz class. You then try to change the subject, or deny the examples given as usual. Now do you wish to retract the U.S.-Soviet ship building comparsion?
"Approximate" is again your subjective opinion. They are not the same size. Kuznetsov is 75% the volume of Nimitz. 87,000!=67,000. I don't know how can I get more clear.
Opinion? The two ships are pretty much in the ballpark in terms of size, that is something even the average layperson would agree on. You are also confusing tonnages, BTW. The displacement tonnages are within 25% of each other, and the linear dimensions are within 90% of each other (30 meters for length, and 10 meters in beam).

Most people seeing the two ships side-by-side would not notice much of a difference to care about.
Mike DiCenso wrote:For that to be the case, the intitial explosion glow would have to be reaching as far away as the hull section where Archer and Daniels' window is located. We see no glow cast on their faces until very late in the explosion's progress. If the explosion is so close as to reflect a glow around the hull like that, then it is likely underneath the saucer.
Kane Starkiller wrote: So what? Who says the intensity will be the same during the entire explosion? It isn't the same.
That is my point. The explosion's initial glow is not strong enough to reflect off of the hull where Archer and Daniels are at. The only area of the ship that could reasonably reflect light onto the back side of the dome's base structure. On the other hand, the ship being underneath, or nearly underneath perfectly fits with the idea that the ship is very close to the dome when it's destruction starts.
Mike DiCenso wrote:As for the explosion's expansion. Look at the debris being carried by the fireball. A piece of one of the lower "vanes" of the vissian ship is being pushed by the explosion, and yet it is not signficantly changing size relative to camera's and Archer and Daniel's position, but the fireball itself is reaching the dome and the superstructure it is mounted on. Thus the ship is likely close to or underneath the saucer dome. At the very least it is underneath the saucer. Regardless, it sets the lower limit for the E-J saucer at 3.6 km.
Kane Starkiller wrote:Who said that debris is traveling at the camera? Again explosion is not perfectly symmetrical and ordered. Parts of the superheated matter could've been shot farther and faster than others.
You still don't understand, do you? The vane debris is not being pushed laterally by the explosion enough to make it appear larger in size. But that is not all. The YouTube Video of
"Azati Prime" at 3:11 through 3:16 shows the explosion in all visible directions is only a about a 100 or so meters a second.Thus even with an asymetrical explosion, in two seconds the fireball laterally is not travelling all that much further, and therefore the vissian ship is underneath the E-J saucer near or underneath the dome.

All of you objections so far are hand waving, and thus there is nothing to disclude the vissian ship being near the dome or just underneath the E-J saucer.
-Mike

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Post by Mike DiCenso » Mon Mar 31, 2008 1:53 am

Kane Starkiller wrote:What are the distances between Federation and Cardassia? What is the time frame?
The canon map, on the left of the fourth row, from DS9 shows Cardassia and Bajor thousands of light years from Earth. The Dominion war battlelines would have been spread over hundreds and thousands apon thousands of light years. It is impossible for every battle to have the same GCS.
-Mike
Last edited by Mike DiCenso on Tue Jun 17, 2008 8:05 am, edited 1 time in total.

Roondar
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Post by Roondar » Mon Mar 31, 2008 10:43 am

Mike DiCenso wrote:
Kane Starkiller wrote:What are the distances between Federation and Cardassia? What is the time frame?
The canon map, on the left of the fourth row, from DS9 shows Cardassia and Bajor thousands of light years from Earth. The Dominion war battlelines would have been spread of hundreds and thousands apon thousands of light years. It is impossible for every battle to have the same GCS.
-Mike
... Unless Warp speeds are a whole lot higher than we think they are.

Kane Starkiller
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Post by Kane Starkiller » Mon Mar 31, 2008 2:06 pm

Mike DiCenso wrote:The canon map, on the left of the fourth row, from DS9 shows Cardassia and Bajor thousands of light years from Earth. The Dominion war battlelines would have been spread of hundreds and thousands apon thousands of light years. It is impossible for every battle to have the same GCS.
Actually the map provides several real stars so we can measure their distance on map and get the ly/pixel ratio. After measuring the distance of the stars I get the following table:
alpha centauri 4.22ly 36.2px 0.117ly/px
tau ceti 11.9ly 29.83px 0.399ly/px
sirius 8.6ly 39.56px 0.217ly/px
rigel 800ly 101.2px 7.9ly/px
regulus 77ly 222.85px 0.346ly/px
deneb 3000ly 239.14px 12.54ly/px

We get various ly/px ratios which can be explained by all stars not being on the same plane. Thus, for example, Deneb and Rigel are "above" and "below" the plane which means their projected distance will be smaller on the map thus increasing the ratio. So assuming Cardassia is on the "same plane" as Alpha Centauri it is 78ly from Earth. This can get even lower if Alpha Centauri is not on the same plane as Earth. Assuming Cardassia is on the same plane as Deneb the distance is 8439ly from Earth. This can get even higher if we assume that Cardassia is more distant from Earth's plane than Deneb.
In conclusion the map is utterly useless pointing to distances ranging from below 78ly to over 8500ly depending on what assumptions we take.

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Post by Kane Starkiller » Mon Mar 31, 2008 3:08 pm

Mike DiCenso wrote:Because, if you had bothered to look again at the image in the link, the D'kyr class in that one screencap is about 4 times the length of the 225 meter NX-01, which means that 900 meters, or nearly so was possible, and the Federation was even around then, this was just what the Vulcans were able to do on their own.
Wait a minute. First you said 600m-800m now all of a sudden is 900m. Memory alpha which you linked to says 600m and besides we are talking volume. With that huge empty space between the rings I can't see it being more massive than Galaxy.
Mike DiCenso wrote:Now you're just mincing definitions. Is the B-1B Lancer a bomber or is it not? Is it an aircraft capable of super-sonic speeds? Yes to both. The capability existed for the U.S. to follow up and build a second class of large, super-sonic bomb post-XB-70. The only thing that changed was the mission requirements.

Also, the U.S. still has maintained the capability to build a large, sub-sonic bomber as witnessed by the B-2 Spirit stealth bomber. Although the stealth capability requirement necessitated a different configuration and use of composite materials, the overall size and capability of the B-2 is similar to the B-52 bombers.
You make it sound as if supersonic is a homogenous class of bombers and if you can build one you can build the other. Yes B-1 is a supersonic bomber just like XB-70. Meanwhile Galaxy is a warp ship just like D'Kyr. But just like B-1 is smaller than XB-70 the Galaxy might be smaller than D'Kyr. If US tried to build fleets of XB-70's today it would bankrupt itself. The same could be true with the Federation. I'm not saying that is the case merely responding to your claim that you can't loose previously owned capabilities.
Mike DiCenso wrote:No, you are the one broad-brush twisting of a dictionary definition. That JMS turned it back on you is simple tit-for-tat.
I wouldn't even have to use dictionary definitions if it wasn't for your overwhelming urge to find any way to ignore Death Star. Yes it can fly supralight, has weapons, shields, armor and EU sources explicitly describe sublight engines but is it really really really a starship?
Mike DiCenso wrote:They are not unavoidable, especially when you couple that evidence with Bernd's article's evidence.
I'll assume you meant unavoidable. Bernd makes the same assumption you do: that the Galaxies seen in various Dominion war battles were not the same which may or may not be true.
Mike DiCenso wrote:You are the one pretending here. I have shown over and over more and more evidence, and all you do is come up with excuses, or handwaving to ignore it.

Bernd's article is merely icing on the cake with the additional "dark neck" variants that are seen nowhere else in addition to the Venture's unique "bumps" on her warp nacelles.
Venture's bumps only seen from above. Again I ask you did we see all five ships from above at once? And even if we did it only raises the number of ships by one. You can assume the ships are not the same but you can't call it evidence.
Mike DiCenso wrote:So? Even if we were to assume the three gaps there, it still does not disclude that there are elements that have Galaxy wings in them as part of their makeup. That would be 2-3 GCS per fleet, or about 14 to 21 GCS total in Starfleet.
What are Galaxy wings? How many Galxies are in each? Does Galaxy wing consists only of Galaxy class ships or is the wing simply led by the Galaxy similar to " 5 Carrier battlegroup" which doesn't mean there is actually 5 groups each consisting of several aircraft carriers.
Mike DiCenso wrote:What does it matter? Why would all 8 (there are eight as per the screencap in Bernd's article) GCS be there? Were they having a GCS convention? It makes no sense, nor would it make sense that all 8 or more were sitting around within a light year of Earth just waiting for something to happen as per the dialog from "Endgame":

ADMIRAL PARIS: What the hell is it?
BARCLAY: A transwarp aperture. It's less than a light year from Earth.
OFFICER: How many Borg vessels?
BARCLAY: We can't get a clear reading, but the graviton emissions are off the scale.
ADMIRAL PARIS: I want every ship in range to converge on those co-ordinates now.
CREWWOMAN: Yes, sir

So even though this takes place about 3 years after the Dominion War in 2378, you still have to explain why all of the existing GCS in Starfleet are hanging out around within a light year of Earth. It certainly would not take that long for all of them to have battle damgage repaired, and it certainly would not take that long for redeployment to other parts of the Federation and beyond... Not unless there is a larger number of them out there. Like the "dark neck" GCS that are conspicously absent from the Endgame fleet, and the Venture with her distinctive warp nacelles.
Refit and repair perhaps. And I honestly never observed these "dark neck" Galaxies. In the images that supposedly show them they all look like normal Galaxies to me.
Mike DiCenso wrote:No you are not. You are asking for ever increasing standards. I the Death Star 2 case, I remind you that I was stating that it was theoretically possible that the Empire could have or would have desired to complete it. I even clarified that for you. Did the DS2 get completed. Yes or no? No, obviously. Could have possibily been completed. Theoretically, yes.

You on the other hand are ignoring and continuing to do so with each level of evidence provided to increase the standard of that evidence concerning the existance of more than 5 GCS. Now you are faced with at least 8 currently existing GCS and likely 10 more, given the two "dark neck GCS", and an 11th in the form of the unique varient USS Venture. We also have to deal with the practicallities of deployments. Why would all 8 GCS be sitting around for 3 years in within a light year of Earth?

That does not even include the three GCS destroyed prior to the Dominion war which would bump that number up to 11-14.
My standards are not increasing: find me evidence of more than 5 or so Galaxies. So far we are at 8 or so not counting the 3 lost. I am not saying they definitely don't have more we just have no evidence either way.
We could assume that those seen at various campaigns are not the same but then it would have to be acknowledged it's an assumption.
Mike DiCenso wrote:No, I would remind you that we have seen the second Death Star under a later stage of construction, while we saw the first Death Star early on, however unlike the second, there is a distinct lack of internal superstructure. The Mandel blueprints are not canon, nor even offically licensed material just as was the same with his ISD blueprints. We also have seen a distinct contradiction between the canon AoTC and RoTJ scematics of the Death Stars and most of the offical EU/ICS material.

As for the Unicomplex, I can simply turn things around to point out that neither did Paris or anyone else state that the signal was coming from 600 km away in a seperate unicomplex. In fact, in "Dark Frontier", they talk only about one unicomplex.
So what? We've seen the complete Death Star and it is one ship just as much as any Borg cube or Federation starship. Unicomplex on the other hand was never explored in detail and consists of many loosely connected structures and it's impossible to make out whether all are actually connected.
Anyway since we don't know other dimensions and since the entire complex is a bunch of barely connected modules your initial claim that it dwarfs the Death Star is baseless.
Mike DiCenso wrote:Opinion? The two ships are pretty much in the ballpark in terms of size, that is something even the average layperson would agree on. You are also confusing tonnages, BTW. The displacement tonnages are within 25% of each other, and the linear dimensions are within 90% of each other (30 meters for length, and 10 meters in beam).

Most people seeing the two ships side-by-side would not notice much of a difference to care about.
But that doesn't change the fact Soviet Union never constructed anything larger. I honestly don't understand why is it so hard for you to accept the same standard of evidence you seek for the Empire. We never saw the Federation construct larger ships and the fact that Romulan Empire and Dominion can do it doesn't mean the Federation can. They are not the same political, economic or technological entity.
Mike DiCenso wrote:You still don't understand, do you? The vane debris is not being pushed laterally by the explosion enough to make it appear larger in size. But that is not all. The YouTube Video of
"Azati Prime" at 3:11 through 3:16 shows the explosion in all visible directions is only a about a 100 or so meters a second.Thus even with an asymetrical explosion, in two seconds the fireball laterally is not travelling all that much further, and therefore the vissian ship is underneath the E-J saucer near or underneath the dome.

All of you objections so far are hand waving, and thus there is nothing to disclude the vissian ship being near the dome or just underneath the E-J saucer.
Now that I look at the video it's clear that no part of the ship that wouldn't be in the line of sight even if the ship is beyond the saucer is not illuminated. Bottom left of the dome is lit up bot not the dome facing Archer and Daniels. Again there is no evidence that the ship is beneath the saucer.

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Post by Cocytus » Mon Mar 31, 2008 4:55 pm

http://ds9.trekcore.com/gallery/albums/ ... ld_473.jpg

The URL above is a screenshot which clearly shows the "dark-neck" variant. That isn't any trick of the light or shadow cast by another starship. If I had to guess at an in-universe explanation, I'd say these are new spaceframes constructed with heavier armor on the Engineering hull, a hard-learned lesson following the loss of the Enterprise-D.

Don't click the link, copy and paste it into a new window.

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Post by Kane Starkiller » Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:46 pm

Roondar wrote:Since we now know that -despite any other arguments- the DS 'transports' part of the planet into hyperspace to do it's work, you'll certainly agree that any statements regarding the DS's shield absorbing exploding planets are both false and unquantifiable.
How can hyperspace "do it's work"? The reactor needs to do the work to reach hyperspace not the other way around.
Secondly objects in hyperspace still interact with objects in normal space as stated by Han Solo thus even objects in hyperspace would hit the Death Star. Finally simply by observing Alderaans explosion we can clearly see that much of the planet still remains in "realspace". Even assuming 0.1% remained in realspace that's still 10^28J or 2 trillion megatons hitting Death Star.

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Post by Mike DiCenso » Mon Mar 31, 2008 11:09 pm

Kane Starkiller wrote:
Mike DiCenso wrote:The canon map, on the left of the fourth row, from DS9 shows Cardassia and Bajor thousands of light years from Earth. The Dominion war battlelines would have been spread of hundreds and thousands apon thousands of light years. It is impossible for every battle to have the same GCS.
Actually the map provides several real stars so we can measure their distance on map and get the ly/pixel ratio. After measuring the distance of the stars I get the following table:
alpha centauri 4.22ly 36.2px 0.117ly/px
tau ceti 11.9ly 29.83px 0.399ly/px
sirius 8.6ly 39.56px 0.217ly/px
rigel 800ly 101.2px 7.9ly/px
regulus 77ly 222.85px 0.346ly/px
deneb 3000ly 239.14px 12.54ly/px

We get various ly/px ratios which can be explained by all stars not being on the same plane. Thus, for example, Deneb and Rigel are "above" and "below" the plane which means their projected distance will be smaller on the map thus increasing the ratio. So assuming Cardassia is on the "same plane" as Alpha Centauri it is 78ly from Earth. This can get even lower if Alpha Centauri is not on the same plane as Earth. Assuming Cardassia is on the same plane as Deneb the distance is 8439ly from Earth. This can get even higher if we assume that Cardassia is more distant from Earth's plane than Deneb.
In conclusion the map is utterly useless pointing to distances ranging from below 78ly to over 8500ly depending on what assumptions we take.
Hardly useless. There is a scale on that chart in the form of raidal line segments as detailed by JMS in another thread concerning the distance from the Romulan Neutral Zone to Earth. Along the Earth's latitude it is some 5,400 ly, and at the furthest tips, nearly 8,000 ly.
-Mike

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Post by Kane Starkiller » Mon Mar 31, 2008 11:31 pm

Mike DiCenso wrote:Hardly useless. There is a scale on that chart in the form of raidal line segments as detailed by JMS in another thread concerning the distance from the Romulan Neutral Zone to Earth. Along the Earth's latitude it is some 5,400 ly, and at the furthest tips, nearly 8,000 ly.
That's not possible. The "width" of the shown area cannot possibly be more than width_of_the_map*ly/px. Width of the map is 1120px and from the distance between Earth and Alpha Centauri we know that one pixel is no more than 0.117ly. Therefore the width of the map is no more than 131ly.
The only way Cardassia is much farther is if it's "above" or "below" the map.

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Post by Mike DiCenso » Tue Apr 01, 2008 12:05 am

That's degrees in galactic coordinates, which makes it at least 5,400 ly wide. Not unless you think that the Milky Way galaxy somehow shrunk, of course... Also there's the Deneb and Rigel issues to deal with as well given that it is only four "boxes" over to Deneb, it would make for quite an impressive distance for each box, which then means that the distance from Earth to Alpha Centauri is exaggerated so as to make them more visible on the map. Either way, the coordinates, plus at least two of the real-world star locations make for a Federation in the thousands of light years.
-Mike

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Post by Kane Starkiller » Tue Apr 01, 2008 12:12 am

Mike DiCenso wrote:That degrees in galactic coordinates, which makes it at least 5,400 ly wide. Not unless you think that the Milky Way galaxy somehow shrunk, of course... Also there's the Deneb and Rigel issues to deal with as well given that it is only four "boxes" over to Deneb, it would make for quite an impressive distance for each box, which then means that the distance from Earth to Alpha Centauri is exaggerated so as to make them more visible on the map. Either way, the coordinates, plus at lest two of the real-world star locations make for a Federation in the thousands of light years.
First what evidence do you have that those numbers are degrees? Secondly how can you possibly tell in what box is Deneb located? It could be way below or way above. What about other stars I mentioned? I even forgot Aldebaran which is 65ly from Earth. Again the obvious explanation for discrepancy between Deneb's real distance and the apparent much shorter distance compared to other real stars is that is way "above" or "below" the plane as I stated.
Fourthly what evidence do you have that Alpha Centauri's distance is exaggerated? Looking at my table you'll see that only Deneb and Rigel are real outliers in terms of ly/px ratio so if there is a mistake it's with them

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Post by Jedi Master Spock » Tue Apr 01, 2008 2:01 am

Kane Starkiller wrote:First what evidence do you have that those numbers are degrees?
Try the perspective of the map, which matches with the radial segments in question converging at the galactic core. Try also the appearance of the map, which displays the arm structure of the galaxy.

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Post by Jedi Master Spock » Tue Apr 01, 2008 2:52 am

Kane Starkiller wrote:Evidence that they "commonly" have stationkeeping thrusters. DS9 is one starbase, one smaller than an ISD.
What, and you think it's that special?

Many starbases are close to planets and have a need for stationkeeping thrusters.
In other words when we see the entire Death Star the resolution could easily be too small to see any engines and the percentage of the surface seen at close range is maybe 1% if we use your "hundreds of square kilometes" which you haven't backed up yet.
Incorrect. We should be able to see active engines down to clusters the size of the one driving the ISD, or alternatively a very large number of small ones distributed about the equatorial trench (which the closer shots rule out as well.)
In other words the only "evidence" for the lack of engines is your assumption that if there were they would have to be bigger than 100m.
As they would have to be, given SW ion thruster technology as seen on screen - either that, or extremely numerous, which is also ruled out.
Oh it's OK to use DS2 turning ability.
As an outer ballpark, yes.
The point is that since it is uncompleted it cannot be used to say it's an upper limit. Your insistence that we use either DS2+upper limit or no DS2 at all is a false dilemma.
As I have pointed out, the DS2 being incomplete means it is noticeably less massive as well.
Ion engines expel matter by use of electromagnetic and electrostatic fields not by thermal reaction like current engines.
No matter how you propel it, relativistic ionized gases ejected from a tiny nozzle at high rates will end up being superheated. You can't squeeze the plume problem away.

Either you have larger quantities of gas, which would be visible (clouds of ionized gases tend to be), or you have incredibly high energies, which ends up meaning a luminous corona.
Then of course there is your assumption that Death Star should've fired it's engines just in the moments we have seen it.
It is in the process of "orbiting at maximum velocity." The engines should be at full through the approach.
No it isn't.
Yes it is.
You are again confusing your personal opinion of what is important as fact.
You are again confusing justified opinion with unjustified opinion.
Is that a quote out of somewhere? You know it would be helpful if you stop playing games and simply provide the names and pages of the things you quote. Either way quantify how for is "as far as the eye can see".
As far as the eye can see is a goodly distance. In this case, we're talking about hundreds of meters, generally. Great big open volumes constituting a very significant fraction of the sample of the DS2's interior we have seen.
You will honestly insist that fraction of empty space is not as important as total empty space for the purpose of determining it's impact on density? Even after I illustrated why this is incorrect?
You are again completely off-base.

The only fraction that really matters is the fraction of our observed sample, not the entire Death Star. It is more important for us to catalog the size of the typical open space, in comparison with the thickness of interior walls/supports.
In other words unless I assume that half of Death Star's mass is contained within 1/1000 of it's volume I'm not being conservative?
No... although the scenario I gave is hardly unusual in turns of moments. You can have a much more gradual distribution with a similarly sharp drop in moment of inertia.

Assuming uniform distribution is not conservative. You're losing a factor that could easily be up to 2. Add in the thruster location problem, and claimed possible accelerations drop floorward by a probable half order of magnitude.
There is conservative and there is robbery. High density equipment could've just as easily be placed in the outer layers.
The reactor and its fuel - hyperdense or not - are centrally located.

In fact, minimizing the moment of inertia by keeping heavier equipment along its axis of rotation in order to maximize turning speed is a sound design principle for something as awkward as the Death Star.
Not as much as I'm claiming? I merely assumed that Death Star's engines can direct as much energy to achieve translational acceleration as to achieve rotational acceleration.
With perfect efficiency with a uniform mass distribution, an ample fuel supply, et cetera.

It's most likely only half an order of magnitude too high - meaning we're actually talking about 15 cm/s^2 rather than 44 - but if you like such things as Saxtonian hyper-dense matter in the core, you get much further.
Which orbit? There isn't just one orbit around a planet. What distance to the planet is the orbit? It's position and orientation? It all just accidentaly worked in Death Star's favour so it doesn't have to fire it's engines to reach Yavin 4?
I'm afraid your objection is not well thought out. Every fast elliptical orbit will give it a decent line of sight to Yavin IV at some point. A perpendicular one at almost all points.
I see. So you continue to think up ridiculous concepts for a starship and then accuse me of them being ridiculous?
Until you realize that your abuse of definition makes the term meaningless.
Those definitions are not relevant. They are not physical objects. They don't have mass, density, volume, structural strength etc. etc.
So? The dictionary says they are devices, and only requires them to be devices in order to be spacecraft. Nothing is said of density, volume, et cetera.
By all means show me the model under which evaporation of ink produces the thrust.
Gas expands uniformly, except in the direction of the pen. This produces net thrust via conservation of momentum. QED.
No it isn't.
Yes it is.
It is different in scale. It fulfills each and every definition of starship as GCS and ISD whether you admit it or not.
It is capable of travel within as well as without a system? It can fly within lower atmosphere? It can maneuver within combat? It is capable of evasive action? It can dock at space stations?
That may be your opinion. Opinions are not evidence.
Only founded upon them in some cases. Such as here.
Tactical manouver next to what? Ships millions or trillions of times smaller than it is? Of course it isn't. What does that prove?
That it does not have the sublight capability to qualify it as a spaceship in the first place.
Not unless you'd be so kind and explain it.
A strategic weapon does not turn a military base into a warship. Comprende? If I built a Freedom Ship and launched an ICBM from it, it would not become a fighting ship in the way that a cruiser is.
I mean see it finished and coasting.
I suppose next you're going to say that you wouldn't believe the Chinese capable of putting a man on the moon, given the budget and motivation, until you see it - because they've never built an Apollo rocket.
How does this change the fact it is mobile? And sources which I presented explicitly state it can move through normal space with it's own engines.
Which I debunked, you may recall. It shows no indications of being able to break out of orbit of, say, Yavin without using hyperdrive.
Evidence please.
See TrekCore for screenshots of crashed Borg scout.
Why not?
Because the stated (and ever-reducing) intercept time is given as the fastest they could catch the Borg. If slowing to impulse was not required by the situation, then there would be a faster possible intercept time.

Especially given that high warp speeds, such as are used in desperation, are generally much faster than that.
If I knew how inertial dampers work I would be a very rich man. But I do know that they cannot cheat newton's third law. Inertia must be transfered from objects within the ship (crew, equipment) and to the inertial dampers and then to the bolts to which it is fastened to the ship's hull.

Inertial compensators are still limited by structural strength of the material they are fastened to as Newton's third law dictates.
Inertia is transferred... namely, evenly across the entire ship.
I already stated that internal crew quarters are all protected. I certainly never stated that individual crew members only are protected by inertial dampers. Even if the dish is protected what does this have to do with inertia being transferred to the devices that provide protection? If acceleration exceeds certain limit the devices will be ripped out from walls.
Which we never see, which in turn requires materials strengths that render structural concerns regarding engine pressures moot.
So you think you can scatter a bunch of inertial dampers around the ship and completely eliminate inertial force? The ship accelerates by ejecting a mass from it's engines. This at the same time causes engines to be pushed forward and the entire ship with it. The force that pushes the engines has the engines press against their bracings. If your theory worked and your strategically placed inertial dampers completely eliminated that force then the ship would not accelerate. Do you understand this? There is no acceleration if there is no force acting upon the object. If a force is to act upon the object it must be braced somewhere on the object. And if you apply strong enough force that something will eventually get ripped off from the object.
You still don't even understand what I'm trying to explain to you, nor do you grasp the physics particularly well.

Inertia is not a force. It is the resistance to force. By communicating the force accelerating the ship evenly to the entire ship and its contents, as a spatial field, an inertial compensator eliminates internal collisions caused by uneven acceleration of different parts of the ship. A crewmember is fine not because they are not accelerating, but because all of their body is being accelerated in the same direction at the same time along with the walls surrounding them - hence behaving as if no force is present (locally) just as in a free fall.

Of course, then there's artificial gravity, and the occasional "lurch" when the field fluctuates by a small fraction while adjusting to an unexpected vector change.
Ah so drag IS critical isn't it? Besides ever since astronauts dropped the feather and hammer on Moon's surface I would've thought it is clear that terrestrial behavior with respect to acceleration is not readily applicable to space.
It's not as critical relative to size as much as hull form... and in the case of naval vessels, affects top speed much more than acceleration.
Death Star's weapons are order of magnitude more numerous and powerful,
The turbolasers are most likely a small fraction of the cost of either the Death Star or the Executor.

Although the Death Star does not have too many orders of magnitude more surface weaponry than the Executor, surprisingly enough, by most counts.
it's hyperdrive is designed to move a ship 100,000 times larger, it uses up 100,000 times more material,
Does it? What's the relative density of the two?

Unknown.
it has more crewmembers. There is no way that Death Star could've been built and not bankrupt the Empire while Executor did. In any case I thought the quote was been clarified as a few systems bankrupted.
Straining the budget. And mind you, there was an entire class behind it, and not a word was said about how much of that was sunk into R&D.

It is more likely along the lines of "the straw that broke the camel's back" than something that, in and of itself, the Empire could not afford. Indubitably, without the Death Star project consuming so much in terms of resource, the Executor project would have probably not strained the military budget.
Because I didn't see it vaporize enemy vessels with one shot or the Rebel fleet having to fly inside it's unfinished structure in order to have prayer of destroying it.
No, that doesn't do it.
It isn't unjustified. Death Star's firepower, size, durability (first one's shield absorbed exploding planets) speak for themselves.
It is. You know next to nothing about the actual cost.
Actually the only thing he provides is 7 Galaxies seen at once in Endgame so I accept that this would be a lower limit. I still see no reason why I should accept significantly larger fleets.
Certainly more than 7 were built, and it is very strongly suggested that there were a good number more than that operational.

Your claims about there only being 5 were downright ridiculous.

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