In defense on TDiC

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Mike DiCenso
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Post by Mike DiCenso » Tue Sep 30, 2008 2:00 am

Mr. Oragahn wrote: Pretending that Earth, the head of a major force like the UFP in a whole quadrant, the only group from known species to have defeated the Borg twice, would be a low priority is just a huge stretch.
Actually, Humanity and the Federation are not the only species to successfully resist the Borg for some time: Species 8472 and Arturis' people, are examples.
Mr. Oragahn wrote: As to whether they went to assimilate Earth instead of downright destroying it or most of it, that's left open to argumentation. They surely do a shitty job at it, when it comes to efficiency. Instead of spamming a target with missiles containing legions of nanites which would spread on their own and some stuff like that, they looked very concerned about bombarding Earth by any means possible in First Contact, even if it means firing the last megajoules of energy left in whatever reactor they had in that sphere.
Actually, in VOY's "Dark Frontier" , that is precisely what the Borg Queen was scheming in order to assimilate humanity. The Queen tries to get Seven of Nine to help in the weapon's development, but naturally Seven resists.
Mr. Oragahn wrote: It also has some funky surface waves, which remind of the genesis device. At least there's a pattern, somehow.
Let's just say they used a different recipe than the genesis one, not even a perfect one, but one that would do the job, with different effects here and there.
That does not quite follow since there are many types of explosions in Trek that do not involve protomatter. For instance, the most famous such ring explosion is the destruction of the Klingon moon Praxisin ST6, which was the result of improper safety precautions in the mining of dilithium. There is also the photonic shockwave seen in VOY's "Workforce, Part II".
-Mike

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Post by Mr. Oragahn » Tue Sep 30, 2008 2:17 am

They are not waves spreading over the surface of a world, espousing its shape, and the photonic shockwave is a nonsense invented by writers to explain an issue about torp ranges or something, and it just made matter worse. As far as I'm concerned, that photonic crap doesn't even exist, because it's absolutely retarded.

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Post by Mike DiCenso » Tue Sep 30, 2008 3:36 am

Which is irrelevant since the photonic shockwave incident appeared in a canon episode.
-Mike

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Post by Roondar » Tue Sep 30, 2008 9:21 am

Mike DiCenso wrote:Which is irrelevant since the photonic shockwave incident appeared in a canon episode.
-Mike
Indeed, if we could hold to those ideas we can just start all VS debates by throwing out whatever we don't like or can't beat.

Oh wait, that's exactly what all debaters against TDiC have been doing for the last decade or so (no, I don't mean the VFX debate - I mean the 20 AQ ships vs world = 20 ships + pile of rubble thing that consistently gets thrown out of ST canon by debaters).

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Post by Mr. Oragahn » Tue Sep 30, 2008 12:29 pm

Mike DiCenso wrote:Which is irrelevant since the photonic shockwave incident appeared in a canon episode.
-Mike
Oh yes but see, I can't really care, because it's absolutely retarded. So if you take it as canon, then all races using photon torps are immensely retarded.
Then comes a long debate where some Trekkies will try to sell me a rationalization which will rationalize nothing, to explain why armies don't shoot their own torpedoes to maximize gain in all situations.

We had a thread about that, and it went nowhere to explain why ships don't shoot torps. Voy staff created this rationalization, which was bad.

See, guys, debaters will arguably ignore certain figures because they know they stick out, they don't fit, because they're either too low or too high. I do the same with that single nut of nonsense.
The question is do you want a consistent universe, or not.

TDiC was put out because all explanations were terrible, notably while Trekkies would use TDiC as a proof of standard firepower.
The advantage of the protomatter thing, assuming it would be more effective against matter, would explain why such weapons were much less potent when Dominion forces came, that is, against an ensemble of ships which have never been deemed that powerful, notably because of the ships which those Dominion ships won or lost against.
Last edited by Mr. Oragahn on Tue Sep 30, 2008 8:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Post by Jedi Master Spock » Tue Sep 30, 2008 3:15 pm

I agree that you absolutely do have to throw some stuff out to make a universe coherent enough to analyze logically. And this is why I usually wind up burying TDIC under the rug, to be taken out only as a point of valid comparison to similar outliers in other franchises. It is equally ridiculous to conclude 1e27+ watt outputs for Trek ships based on TDIC as to conclude 1e25+ watt outputs for Wars ships based on Saxton's BDZ claims.

Now, can we technobabble up an explanation for TDIC? Yes. Is it a worthwhile metric for standard Trek ship-based conventional firepower? Not really.

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Post by Mith » Wed Oct 01, 2008 6:26 am

Mr. Oragahn wrote:Pretending that Earth, the head of a major force like the UFP in a whole quadrant, the only group from known species to have defeated the Borg twice, would be a low priority is just a huge stretch.
Um...it isn't. Voyager showed us that the Borg sometimes use races that are technologically advanced like the UFP to use as lab mice to test their latest assimilation methods.
As to whether they went to assimilate Earth instead of downright destroying it or most of it, that's left open to argumentation. They surely do a shitty job at it, when it comes to efficiency. Instead of spamming a target with missiles containing legions of nanites which would spread on their own and some stuff like that, they looked very concerned about bombarding Earth by any means possible in First Contact, even if it means firing the last megajoules of energy left in whatever reactor they had in that sphere.
First of all, there's an entire episode dedicated to your nanite idea. The borg are working on it. Secondly, I've already explained that the Borg in First Contact were more working on the means of stopping first contact with the Vulcans and weakening humanity. This retareded idea that they needed to bombard earth is nothing short of retarded. In case you forgot; they went back into the past to assimilate Earth.
Still, what do you think about protomatter being injected in those torps and fired with those beams?
The major flaw is why this isn't used as a weapon. This thing converts all matter. If the Romulans and the Cardassians have the technology to alter protomatter to the extent of making it into a weapon, then why not use it in war? And why is it so poorly done? Genosis could have ended it in one shot.

It also has some funky surface waves, which remind of the genesis device. At least there's a pattern, somehow.
And said waves also remind me of sub-space shockwaves; which torpedoes produce as do all high-end explosions. Said shockwaves are also able to move faster and might explain that torpedoes are designed to create shockwaves rather than massive explosions; hence why we see little in the way of fireballs in Star Trek.

Let's just say they used a different recipe than the genesis one, not even a perfect one, but one that would do the job, with different effects here and there.
Um...no.

I have a better theory; one supported by the show. We know that there are different types of torpedoes; the ones used in ship to ship combat, and stuff like the Class VI photon torpedo seen in Scorpion. This is probably an uprated version of that; Plasma torpedoes designed specifically for orbital bombardment. As we all know, the shockwave is the most destructive part of a nuke and thus it makes sense that ST powers would focus on creating shockwaves. Sub-space shockwaves is likely the result of that research. After all, it moves faster than light, is easily solid enough, and can probably be more easily created due to the many, many methods of altering sub-space.

What we saw in TDiC is a weapon that was designed to create a massive shockwave, hence the images that we see. The strange cloud stuff is probably the illusion of the Founder's taking it up the tailpipe. So any actual damage to the crust, such as lava flow, may have in fact been masked by the Founder's image.

In any case, I think we can safely agree that these are not typical weapons used, but such weapons are well within the power of the ST powers to make and use. Of course, this is nothing new at all; Kirk did a shit load of damage with the blue bowling ball that striped a planet of half of its atmosphere or the bomb that sent a multimillion ton starship flying clear of a giant space amoeba. Or Genesis, which had a f*ing huge shockwave. Or Praxis itself; which although wasn't intentional, did show a massive explosion.

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Post by Praeothmin » Wed Oct 01, 2008 1:04 pm

Mith wrote:In case you forgot; they went back into the past to assimilate Earth.
And had succeeded too.
If you remember, Data, once the Borg had gone through, had scanned the Earth, and all the lifeforms had suddenly become Borg.
So, although the bombardment was low power, it would have, had it not been interrupted, been successful in destroying the phoenix, or at least stopping it's voyage, without destorying too much material and (future) drones...

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Post by Mr. Oragahn » Thu Oct 02, 2008 2:12 pm

Mith wrote:
Mr. Oragahn wrote:Pretending that Earth, the head of a major force like the UFP in a whole quadrant, the only group from known species to have defeated the Borg twice, would be a low priority is just a huge stretch.
Um...it isn't. Voyager showed us that the Borg sometimes use races that are technologically advanced like the UFP to use as lab mice to test their latest assimilation methods.
It does not make the UFP a minor snack on the buffet.
First of all, there's an entire episode dedicated to your nanite idea. The borg are working on it. Secondly, I've already explained that the Borg in First Contact were more working on the means of stopping first contact with the Vulcans and weakening humanity. This retareded idea that they needed to bombard earth is nothing short of retarded. In case you forgot; they went back into the past to assimilate Earth.
I stand corrected.
Still, what do you think about protomatter being injected in those torps and fired with those beams?
The major flaw is why this isn't used as a weapon. This thing converts all matter. If the Romulans and the Cardassians have the technology to alter protomatter to the extent of making it into a weapon, then why not use it in war? And why is it so poorly done? Genosis could have ended it in one shot.
A protomatter weapon would be less useful against shields.

And I never said they had a Genesis device. I precisely said they got their own recipe based on protomatter.
It also has some funky surface waves, which remind of the genesis device. At least there's a pattern, somehow.
And said waves also remind me of sub-space shockwaves; which torpedoes produce as do all high-end explosions. Said shockwaves are also able to move faster and might explain that torpedoes are designed to create shockwaves rather than massive explosions; hence why we see little in the way of fireballs in Star Trek.
A shockwave doesn't destroy a planet when liquidform people live on it, and it certainly does not destroy mantle.
Unless there's a technobabble shockwave that does something special to matter.
Let's just say they used a different recipe than the genesis one, not even a perfect one, but one that would do the job, with different effects here and there.
Um...no.

I have a better theory; one supported by the show. We know that there are different types of torpedoes; the ones used in ship to ship combat, and stuff like the Class VI photon torpedo seen in Scorpion. This is probably an uprated version of that; Plasma torpedoes designed specifically for orbital bombardment. As we all know, the shockwave is the most destructive part of a nuke and thus it makes sense that ST powers would focus on creating shockwaves. Sub-space shockwaves is likely the result of that research. After all, it moves faster than light, is easily solid enough, and can probably be more easily created due to the many, many methods of altering sub-space.
Where are the massive explosions due to the plasma weapons?
Even multi megaton explosions should have been easily noticed from space, so where are they?
What we saw in TDiC is a weapon that was designed to create a massive shockwave, hence the images that we see.
No, that's what you think they were supposed to do. What they were supposed to do is destruction, not specified as being shockwave weapons whatsoever.
The strange cloud stuff is probably the illusion of the Founder's taking it up the tailpipe. So any actual damage to the crust, such as lava flow, may have in fact been masked by the Founder's image.
Illusions? Why not claim that the waves were an illusion as well? or the whole planet?
Your baseless assumptions are extremely biased.
What's your evidence for this far fetched claim?
In any case, I think we can safely agree that these are not typical weapons used, but such weapons are well within the power of the ST powers to make and use.
Bizarre, you seem to present them as weapons which would rather be very standard, notably because of the reliance on subspace, which is not a mystery among advanced civilizations.
Of course, this is nothing new at all; Kirk did a shit load of damage with the blue bowling ball that striped a planet of half of its atmosphere...
The scientific accuracy of that event keeps puzzling me.
How could one single explosion, fueled by one oune of antimatter taken from the ship's reserves (and directly from the warpcore I think) and leaving such a crater, remove the atmosphere of a planet?
You don't have the single impression that you're just wanking right now?
... or the bomb that sent a multimillion ton starship flying clear of a giant space amoeba.
Big grain of salt. From the same people who crafted the blue ball of doom nonsense.
Or Genesis, which had a f*ing huge shockwave.
Protomatter based.
Special device.
Extremely rare.
Most likely lost tech.
Or Praxis itself; which although wasn't intentional, did show a massive explosion.
While I'm still pondering the scientific accuracy of the following picture as well (notably the idea that there would remain a blue hooze, and a clean blue surface), what kind of stuff were they mining, and even more, what was the quantity of that stuff?
It sounds like you're arguing the Klingons would have OMG weapons of t3h d00mz because they mined an exotic moon made of TNT and that his moon blew up or so.

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Post by Mith » Fri Oct 03, 2008 5:23 pm

Mr. Oragahn wrote:It does not make the UFP a minor snack on the buffet.
Nor does it make it anything more than a passing interest in selection. Because they also have the Ferengi, the Klingons, the Dominion, the Gorn, the Cardassians, and a great deal of other powers who can go toe to toe with UFP technology. Thus far, we have little to no evidence that the Borg have gone after them.

A protomatter weapon would be less useful against shields.
To which we know on the episode...there wasn't any shields.
And I never said they had a Genesis device. I precisely said they got their own recipe based on protomatter.
Perhaps, but so?
A shockwave doesn't destroy a planet when liquidform people live on it,
It would reduce the Founders to pudding; something that would most likely kill them, I'm sure.
and it certainly does not destroy mantle.
Unless there's a technobabble shockwave that does something special to matter.
One would think it would do some pretty impressive damage to the surface. Of course, I would more likely count on the phasers and disruptors to do most of the damage to the crust and mantle; the torpedoes are for reducing the population and add on damage.
Where are the massive explosions due to the plasma weapons?
Even multi megaton explosions should have been easily noticed from space, so where are they?
As in per say what?

No, that's what you think they were supposed to do. What they were supposed to do is destruction, not specified as being shockwave weapons whatsoever.
Considering they looked like funky shockwaves that were moving far too fast...that sounds like a sub-space shockwave to me.
Illusions? Why not claim that the waves were an illusion as well? or the whole planet?
Your baseless assumptions are extremely biased.
What's your evidence for this far fetched claim?
...The fact that the Dominion was sending them back false sensor readings?
Bizarre, you seem to present them as weapons which would rather be very standard, notably because of the reliance on subspace, which is not a mystery among advanced civilizations.
No, I suspect their weapons are based on the smaller yield weapons that we see...something that is not without merit as we see in Obsession and the Immunity Syndrome. Surely most ships don't use them or even carry them and if they do, it would be in limited supply.
The scientific accuracy of that event keeps puzzling me.
How could one single explosion, fueled by one oune of antimatter taken from the ship's reserves (and directly from the warpcore I think) and leaving such a crater, remove the atmosphere of a planet?
You don't have the single impression that you're just wanking right now?
We have no idea what they might have done to said ounce of antimatter used by the ship. Energy generation may not be as big of a problem as you might think. Threshold showed us a shuttle that could literally produce infinite energy, but had the problem of holding at infinite speed. Granted, they used a strange form of dylithium in that episode to get that result, but it's still fascinating in any degree.

Furthermore, this is not out of the ballcourt. We also got a massive bomb that chucked the Enterprise 1701 clear from where the amoeba itself was. Then we have Deja Q where the Enterprise D is using a wparfield and its tractor beam to push the moon from falling; something that was actually working until it was interrupted. Later, we saw them nudge a stellar core off course. In one episode, we're told that the Defiant has enough firepower to basically slag a planet (ie, total firepower, but given her pulse phasers are about equal to three torpedoes, that's about 150-300 megatons).
Big grain of salt. From the same people who crafted the blue ball of doom nonsense.
Which is canon. Or do you dispute its canon status?
Protomatter based.
Special device.
Extremely rare.
Most likely lost tech.
God that's funny. So it's okay if it's a special device and had protomatter as part of the matrix? And of course, it was so rare that a handful of scientists could get it, but not the Federation? And that it would be lost tech, despite the fact that only one person from the project was actually killed.

Right.
While I'm still pondering the scientific accuracy of the following picture as well (notably the idea that there would remain a blue hooze, and a clean blue surface), what kind of stuff were they mining, and even more, what was the quantity of that stuff?
It sounds like you're arguing the Klingons would have OMG weapons of t3h d00mz because they mined an exotic moon made of TNT and that his moon blew up or so.
Dilithium crystals I think. It's supposed to control the antimatter flow and what not, but it's possible that it might also enhance the output and that when the explosion went off, the abundence of the dilithium crystals caused the major explosion.

As for the planet...I suspect that the Klingons had a planetary shield up. It probably took the brunt of the explosion.

And no, I am not suggesting this or any other weapons as common use. All of these weapons/whatever are clearly not used for ship to ship combat. Orbital bombardment? Sure, I'll go with that. Ship to ship? No F*ing way.

For the most part, I put most torpedoes between the 50-100 megaton range.

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Post by Mr. Oragahn » Mon Oct 06, 2008 6:19 pm

Mith wrote:
Mr. Oragahn wrote:It does not make the UFP a minor snack on the buffet.
Nor does it make it anything more than a passing interest in selection. Because they also have the Ferengi, the Klingons, the Dominion, the Gorn, the Cardassians, and a great deal of other powers who can go toe to toe with UFP technology. Thus far, we have little to no evidence that the Borg have gone after them.
Show me any of these races having records of fiercely fighting the Borg and defeating two of their mightest ships.
A protomatter weapon would be less useful against shields.
To which we know on the episode...there wasn't any shields.
There are on ships. Which would make the weapon only super good against inert matter, worlds and that stuff, but terrible against shields.
And I never said they had a Genesis device. I precisely said they got their own recipe based on protomatter.
Perhaps, but so?
So what? That's it, there's nothing to add. It's a different design. Period.
A shockwave doesn't destroy a planet when liquidform people live on it,
It would reduce the Founders to pudding; something that would most likely kill them, I'm sure.
Founder who can live in space. A schockwave that cracks rocks is not rating high on that list of menaces to advanced liquid forms which can live in space and adopt any form.
It's like pretending you destroy the water in a bathtub because you crack the tub.
and it certainly does not destroy mantle.
Unless there's a technobabble shockwave that does something special to matter.
One would think it would do some pretty impressive damage to the surface.
The surface is solid. Yes you can crack it with a shockwave. That's all.
The mantle is another affair.
The only ways to destroy mantle is to either vapourize it, NDF it or cool it down, which none of the weapons have been doing or seen doing at the magnitude needed for such destruction. The most bizarre effect, NDF, would only be a danger if it would remove large quantities of matter, which would of course get noticed from the moment quantities of the crust would disappear, changing the mass of the planet and its external structure.
That's why your shockwave theory is better in that respect, but fails to consider that it won't kill things which are not solid.
Of course, I would more likely count on the phasers and disruptors to do most of the damage to the crust and mantle;
Either that's a pointless argument to make since only those weapons were used against the planet, or you're arguing that aside of the shockwave, phasers and torps would directly damage the mantle and account for most of the destruction. That is just so wrong, because it would require yields which consequences on the planet would have been clearly observed.
Even more, it would mean the major part of the damage would be made with the standard side of weapons, not the exotic shockwave add-on, which means you'd be arguing for an insane standard firepower.
the torpedoes are for reducing the population and add on damage.
Both weapons had the same effects.
Where are the massive explosions due to the plasma weapons?
Even multi megaton explosions should have been easily noticed from space, so where are they?
As in per say what?
Excuse me, but I asked a simple question. Or are you doubting that we should see such effects with gigatons of firepower.
Or do you think the plasma is special?
No, that's what you think they were supposed to do. What they were supposed to do is destruction, not specified as being shockwave weapons whatsoever.
Considering they looked like funky shockwaves that were moving far too fast...that sounds like a sub-space shockwave to me.
But would fail at killing non solids, especially non solids which can turn in gas and live in space. You'd need something more significant than a kinetic wave.
Illusions? Why not claim that the waves were an illusion as well? or the whole planet?
Your baseless assumptions are extremely biased.
What's your evidence for this far fetched claim?
...The fact that the Dominion was sending them back false sensor readings?
They faked their presence. That's *only* requiring a fake signal and jamming the rest. This is a far cry from claiming that the brown clouds are an optical illusion. Please provide evidence of this most far fetched claim.
Bizarre, you seem to present them as weapons which would rather be very standard, notably because of the reliance on subspace, which is not a mystery among advanced civilizations.
No, I suspect their weapons are based on the smaller yield weapons that we see...something that is not without merit as we see in Obsession and the Immunity Syndrome. Surely most ships don't use them or even carry them and if they do, it would be in limited supply.
Of course, I'm hard pressed to go check for every single episode featuring a torpedo going off or a disruptor hitting a target to see if all unshielded matter around is destroyed by a further subspace shockwave.
Not to mention that you don't "carry" a disruptor, and that from the moment you can fire it at this yield, you can fire it at the same yields against other targets.

You realize that you're just saying these weapons were standard weapons with yields up. Which means, yes, these uber weapons would easily be standard weapons on thier own from the moment the Roms and Cards would enhanced their power, which by your logic, we've seen them do.

Nevermind that these super cranked up weapons didn't make a difference against the typical Dominion ships.
The scientific accuracy of that event keeps puzzling me.
How could one single explosion, fueled by one oune of antimatter taken from the ship's reserves (and directly from the warpcore I think) and leaving such a crater, remove the atmosphere of a planet?
You don't have the single impression that you're just wanking right now?
We have no idea what they might have done to said ounce of antimatter used by the ship. Energy generation may not be as big of a problem as you might think. Threshold showed us a shuttle that could literally produce infinite energy, but had the problem of holding at infinite speed. Granted, they used a strange form of dylithium in that episode to get that result, but it's still fascinating in any degree.

Threshold, courtesy of wikipedia:

This is often considered to be the worst episode of Voyager. Its writer, Brannon Braga, in an interview on the DVD release of season 2, called the episode "a royal steaming stinker". The breaking of the warp 10 barrier is stated in the episode itself to be impossible, yet nonetheless happens; the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual had explained that warp 10 meant infinite speed and thus was effectively meaningless. As a result, the episode was later struck from canon, with Tom Paris explicitly saying in a later episode he'd "never been to transwarp."

Not only I take Voyager's numbers with a big grain of salt, but this is a gem, really.

So we're still stuck with two problems, one being the energy generation issue, which is nonsensical otherwise the UFP has ships running on potential exatons of energy, and secondly, how again are you supposed to remove the atmosphere with a single explosion which, although leaving a large scorch mark, didn't dent the planet like an apple.
Furthermore, this is not out of the ballcourt. We also got a massive bomb that chucked the Enterprise 1701 clear from where the amoeba itself was. Then we have Deja Q where the Enterprise D is using a wparfield and its tractor beam to push the moon from falling; something that was actually working until it was interrupted.
Warp fields are a cheat and don't look much relevant to the topic at hand.
Later, we saw them nudge a stellar core off course.
Yeah, been there done that. Let me guess, they again used the exotic warpfield tech?
In one episode, we're told that the Defiant has enough firepower to basically slag a planet (ie, total firepower, but given her pulse phasers are about equal to three torpedoes, that's about 150-300 megatons).
Again, this was adressed, you wank it out. He said smoking cinder, and there's no need for it to be absolutely ultra literal.
Big grain of salt. From the same people who crafted the blue ball of doom nonsense.
Which is canon. Or do you dispute its canon status?
Depends what you mean by disputing the canon status. If it means "it's present in an episode but is ludicrous to the highest degree for a wide variety of reasons, from continuity to science plausibility", then yes, I dump it.
Protomatter based.
Special device.
Extremely rare.
Most likely lost tech.
God that's funny. So it's okay if it's a special device and had protomatter as part of the matrix? And of course, it was so rare that a handful of scientists could get it, but not the Federation? And that it would be lost tech, despite the fact that only one person from the project was actually killed.
Right.
The UFP surely attempted to prove, despite the first failure, that it was a good tech at planetary scales, right. Where are those other planets fully terraformed with the help of one single device again?
You may also look at notes which tell you how to build a thing, but if there's an important detail you don't even understand, it's not going to work.
While I'm still pondering the scientific accuracy of the following picture as well (notably the idea that there would remain a blue hooze, and a clean blue surface), what kind of stuff were they mining, and even more, what was the quantity of that stuff?
It sounds like you're arguing the Klingons would have OMG weapons of t3h d00mz because they mined an exotic moon made of TNT and that his moon blew up or so.
Dilithium crystals I think. It's supposed to control the antimatter flow and what not, but it's possible that it might also enhance the output and that when the explosion went off, the abundence of the dilithium crystals caused the major explosion.
So it could have been the equivalent of a giant ball of TNT for all we know.
As for the planet...I suspect that the Klingons had a planetary shield up. It probably took the brunt of the explosion.
Pardon? It doesn't matter if the shield, granted by some holy miracle, would have protected that segment of the planet against an internal explosion (we'll also not notice the attempt at wanking up Klingon shields in the process), since what matters is how can that lump of stuff drifting in space can still retain the atmosphere and all the blue stuff at the surface like if the whole mass of the planet still existed.
Even if there was a shield (>_>) it would be looking like a huge opaque blob.
And no, I am not suggesting this or any other weapons as common use. All of these weapons/whatever are clearly not used for ship to ship combat. Orbital bombardment? Sure, I'll go with that. Ship to ship? No F*ing way.

For the most part, I put most torpedoes between the 50-100 megaton range.
Noted.

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Post by Mith » Mon Oct 06, 2008 10:51 pm

Mr. Oragahn wrote:Show me any of these races having records of fiercely fighting the Borg and defeating two of their mightest ships.
Cubes are not the strongest ships that the Collective have; Tactical are. Furthermore, the Borg have attacked Romulan settlements as well; who are just as advanced as the Federation is.
There are on ships. Which would make the weapon only super good against inert matter, worlds and that stuff, but terrible against shields.
By what evidence do you claim this?
Founder who can live in space. A schockwave that cracks rocks is not rating high on that list of menaces to advanced liquid forms which can live in space and adopt any form.
It's like pretending you destroy the water in a bathtub because you crack the tub.
Unfortunately, breaking them apart does kill them, as we've seen pieces of them getting seperated turning back into muck. The shockwave would have basically blown them into pices; like stirring pudding. The differnece is that pudding isn't alive; it isn't one single thing. You can split it into three bowls and then pour it back into one and nothing is different. For an organism however, doing that would more than likely wound if not kill it.

The surface is solid. Yes you can crack it with a shockwave. That's all.
The mantle is another affair.
The only ways to destroy mantle is to either vapourize it, NDF it or cool it down, which none of the weapons have been doing or seen doing at the magnitude needed for such destruction. The most bizarre effect, NDF, would only be a danger if it would remove large quantities of matter, which would of course get noticed from the moment quantities of the crust would disappear, changing the mass of the planet and its external structure.
Not 100% true. First of all, it is probably possible to blow apart the mantle (ie, send the matter away with heavy explosives), but this is fairly impractical and incredibly stupid when you have disruptor cannons at your beck and call.

As for the phaser/disruptor trick, would probably work wonders on it. Remember that phasers have a heating component; to do what they do they need to heat the target. Well, the mantle is pretty hot all on its own. If we say that the phasers work in part by heating and then technobabble sub-space physics doing the rest of the work, well then the mantle is already doing some if not most of the work for you. By that respect, a handful of ships could easily destroy a mantle because part of the process that the phasers/disruptors use is already in the process.
That's why your shockwave theory is better in that respect, but fails to consider that it won't kill things which are not solid.
I disagree; while not as effective against more solid targets, the subspace shockwave could very well kill the targets (the impact alone would turn them into pudding). The only way I could possibly see them surviving is if they turned into a gas of some sort. But against a target that is a liquid life form, it would work fairly well.
Either that's a pointless argument to make since only those weapons were used against the planet, or you're arguing that aside of the shockwave, phasers and torps would directly damage the mantle and account for most of the destruction. That is just so wrong, because it would require yields which consequences on the planet would have been clearly observed.
Even more, it would mean the major part of the damage would be made with the standard side of weapons, not the exotic shockwave add-on, which means you'd be arguing for an insane standard firepower.
Not really, we saw only the opening bombardment; the shockwaves were indeed massive, but they only fired a few torpeodes (out of like what, 300 each? For a nice rounding of 3,000 torpedoes?) and phaser/disruptor shots.
Both weapons had the same effects.
Not per say true, I don't think we ever got a real visual on what the phasers/disruptors did.
Excuse me, but I asked a simple question. Or are you doubting that we should see such effects with gigatons of firepower.
Or do you think the plasma is special?
Your question is confusing because I have no idea what you're talking about context wise, but I'll take a stab.

These weapons may or may not be special; if it is Romulan Plasma weapons, well, they also use trilithium...which is known for stopping all reactions in a star. Possibly why one wouldn't see massive fireballs.
But would fail at killing non solids, especially non solids which can turn in gas and live in space. You'd need something more significant than a kinetic wave.
Point on the gas argument, but again, the Founder would be broken up into a million pieces in his liquid form, which should be significant enough to kill it. The gas is a point, as is escaping to the atmosphere, but I'm not sure they knew that or had a better idea. Granted, they should have known it and perhaps they had a plan for it, but the attack was from surprise; they may have hoped that they Founders would be caught off guard quickly enough to take care of them.
They faked their presence. That's *only* requiring a fake signal and jamming the rest. This is a far cry from claiming that the brown clouds are an optical illusion. Please provide evidence of this most far fetched claim.
Um, it basically was. Unless you want to explain why we saw large shockwaves like water in a pond killing the "Founders"? Of course, the fact that no one suggested anything was wrong is a point.
Of course, I'm hard pressed to go check for every single episode featuring a torpedo going off or a disruptor hitting a target to see if all unshielded matter around is destroyed by a further subspace shockwave.
Not to mention that you don't "carry" a disruptor, and that from the moment you can fire it at this yield, you can fire it at the same yields against other targets.
I've already explained that we really didn't see any phsyical reactions to the disruptors and the mantle issue is fairly easy to wave off due to the special functions of the weapon itself.
You realize that you're just saying these weapons were standard weapons with yields up. Which means, yes, these uber weapons would easily be standard weapons on thier own from the moment the Roms and Cards would enhanced their power, which by your logic, we've seen them do.
I am suggesting that most of the power that we saw was doen by the torpedoes, not the disruptors. Of course, since the weapon itself interacts differntly with matter than it does agianst shields and special materials, your argument is fairly silly.
Nevermind that these super cranked up weapons didn't make a difference against the typical Dominion ships.
Said high-level torpedoes would be incredibly expensive and would probably result in the other side using weapons. Basically the weapons that the Tal Shiar and the Obsidian Order were using were considered illeagle by the code of war and by the Alpha races in general.



This is often considered to be the worst episode of Voyager. Its writer, Brannon Braga, in an interview on the DVD release of season 2, called the episode "a royal steaming stinker". The breaking of the warp 10 barrier is stated in the episode itself to be impossible, yet nonetheless happens; the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual had explained that warp 10 meant infinite speed and thus was effectively meaningless. As a result, the episode was later struck from canon, with Tom Paris explicitly saying in a later episode he'd "never been to transwarp."

Not only I take Voyager's numbers with a big grain of salt, but this is a gem, really.
Wow, now if only you had proof that it was struck from the canon, because all episodes, movies, and the like are canon, even if they suck ass. Paris saying that he never flew at transwarp is clearly false; he has, as was clearly proven by the episode itself.
So we're still stuck with two problems, one being the energy generation issue, which is nonsensical otherwise the UFP has ships running on potential exatons of energy, and secondly, how again are you supposed to remove the atmosphere with a single explosion which, although leaving a large scorch mark, didn't dent the planet like an apple.
That would be a crater actually. Of course, I would rather like to think they used some other method than just half an ounce of magic antimatter, perhaps using the antimatter was only a trigger for the sub-space bomb they put down there.

Warp fields are a cheat and don't look much relevant to the topic at hand.
A cheat? As in how?
Yeah, been there done that. Let me guess, they again used the exotic warpfield tech?
No.
Again, this was adressed, you wank it out. He said smoking cinder, and there's no need for it to be absolutely ultra literal.
He didn't say smoking cinder; I was paraphrasing. He said cinder. I was guessing that he was refering to the planet's surface. Which would probably mean that the Defiant's entire invantory and firepower could do that to a planet given time. He didn't indicate that they could bring all that power to bear however; just that the ship could easily eradicate the planet's population.
Depends what you mean by disputing the canon status. If it means "it's present in an episode but is ludicrous to the highest degree for a wide variety of reasons, from continuity to science plausibility", then yes, I dump it.
Despite the fact that canon doesn't contradict it? The fact that its clearly a powerful weapon stronger than what they normally use?
The UFP surely attempted to prove, despite the first failure, that it was a good tech at planetary scales, right. Where are those other planets fully terraformed with the help of one single device again?
You may also look at notes which tell you how to build a thing, but if there's an important detail you don't even understand, it's not going to work.
Possibly hundreds; we only have three known instances of terraforming. The first was Wrath of Khan. The secon was in TNG, which a few scienists are being killed off. We aren't really shown much, but they were apparently digging into the planet for some unexplained reason. Nor was there any evidence that they had actually introduced the Genesis device/ technology to the planet at any point. The third indication is DS9, where we have protomatter, something that was part of the original Genesis device's design, used by a terraformer to re-ignite a star. Likelyhood of him using it on the other planets is also very possible, but not likely on such a massive scale. It is clear however, that the technology works.

So here we are, have three examples, one of which we see no actual terraforming. The first is a failure, but was an unstable experiment that was performed by someone whose knowledge was 300 years out of date, performed in a nebula rather than on the planet, and create a planet and a star from scratch. There are so many issues here that any scientist would easily dismiss this as an accurate test of Genesis's potential since it was used in an uncontrolled enviroment (wrong one at that, it would be like trying to use a air plane in space and expecting the test to give you accurat results for normal travel on a planet) and opperated by a primitive who probably didn't do it right. Furthermore, only one or two of the scientists died from the results of STII and STIII and most of the intel was saved. Furthermore, there were caverns where the effects of genesis was shown to be working properly without problem that they could study even if all the people had died (which they didn't). Then we have a terraformer over a hundred years later who has performed many wonders with a quote that he uses the same substance that was part of the Genesis's matrix, suggesting that the two technolgies are the same, although the later more advanced. We see that his works are successful and that even his later and most ambitious test was also successful.

But according to your argument, protomatter is uber rare, is a lost technology,and apparently have no evidence of it working on a grand scale such as a planet, despite the fact that it worked on basically rebooting a star.
So it could have been the equivalent of a giant ball of TNT for all we know.
All large explosions tend to cause sub-space shockwaves.


Pardon? It doesn't matter if the shield, granted by some holy miracle, would have protected that segment of the planet against an internal explosion (we'll also not notice the attempt at wanking up Klingon shields in the process), since what matters is how can that lump of stuff drifting in space can still retain the atmosphere and all the blue stuff at the surface like if the whole mass of the planet still existed.
Even if there was a shield (>_>) it would be looking like a huge opaque blob.
No, the explosion occured on Praxis; the Klingon moon that orbits their planet. Judging the shields of the planet by that would be pretty hard given we don't know the distance.

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Mr. Oragahn
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Post by Mr. Oragahn » Wed Oct 08, 2008 2:56 am

Mith wrote:
Mr. Oragahn wrote:Show me any of these races having records of fiercely fighting the Borg and defeating two of their mightest ships.
Cubes are not the strongest ships that the Collective have; Tactical are. Furthermore, the Borg have attacked Romulan settlements as well; who are just as advanced as the Federation is.
Tactical Cubes appeared later in the series, and were very rare. The mighty large Cubes still represented the most obvious and unstoppable assault force the Borg used.
As for the Romulans having to deal with the Borg, you're merely showing that the Romulans were concerned as well. Not proving that the UFP was a minor group.
You plan to go on for how long about this?
I'm sure you're exploited all possible arguments by now and you're still not showing anything to prove your initial assertion.
There are on ships. Which would make the weapon only super good against inert matter, worlds and that stuff, but terrible against shields.
By what evidence do you claim this?
It's part of the suggestion. Protomatter does wonders against matter. It seems to be fine to alter the state of matter. It doesn't mean it wouldn't be effective as part of a weapon against shielded ships, but it does not look like it's known for its effects on shields.
In the end, this is merely part of the theory, in addition to the main reason I mentionned protomatter.
Founder who can live in space. A schockwave that cracks rocks is not rating high on that list of menaces to advanced liquid forms which can live in space and adopt any form.
It's like pretending you destroy the water in a bathtub because you crack the tub.
Unfortunately, breaking them apart does kill them, as we've seen pieces of them getting seperated turning back into muck. The shockwave would have basically blown them into pices; like stirring pudding. The differnece is that pudding isn't alive; it isn't one single thing. You can split it into three bowls and then pour it back into one and nothing is different. For an organism however, doing that would more than likely wound if not kill it.
I've seen Founders turn into gas. That shockwave is, at best, going to exerce a pressure on them, but they have like a whole atmosphere to drift along and compensate for the overpressure.
I'd like to know the details about a Founder dying because its "drops" were spread out too far from each other.
Also, what happens if the shockwave happens to push a Founder into a hole or cave or so?

Even more, as the Link, the Founders are one and a great ocean. All a shockwave will do is create a tidal wave. The Founders at the surface might turn into spray and die, the other underneath would be fine, athough shocked and moved up and down.
The surface is solid. Yes you can crack it with a shockwave. That's all.
The mantle is another affair.
The only ways to destroy mantle is to either vapourize it, NDF it or cool it down, which none of the weapons have been doing or seen doing at the magnitude needed for such destruction. The most bizarre effect, NDF, would only be a danger if it would remove large quantities of matter, which would of course get noticed from the moment quantities of the crust would disappear, changing the mass of the planet and its external structure.
Not 100% true. First of all, it is probably possible to blow apart the mantle (ie, send the matter away with heavy explosives), but this is fairly impractical and incredibly stupid when you have disruptor cannons at your beck and call.
It's also terribly impossible to achieve for these people. The amount of matter to either vapourized in so few shots, or to NDF away, is mind boggling, and no Trek ship has reached anything close to that.
As for the phaser/disruptor trick, would probably work wonders on it. Remember that phasers have a heating component; to do what they do they need to heat the target. Well, the mantle is pretty hot all on its own. If we say that the phasers work in part by heating and then technobabble sub-space physics doing the rest of the work, well then the mantle is already doing some if not most of the work for you. By that respect, a handful of ships could easily destroy a mantle because part of the process that the phasers/disruptors use is already in the process.
That's fine if you only gloss over the amount of energy to turn the molten matter into gas, and even more to provide enough power to do so as to affect a mantle in its entirety.
From the moment they could that on a planet, they could fire the same stuff at ships, yet their weapons didn't show more potent against Dominion ships and I'm fairly sure Dominion ships don't rate in the high gigaton/teraton craze.
That's why your shockwave theory is better in that respect, but fails to consider that it won't kill things which are not solid.
I disagree; while not as effective against more solid targets, the subspace shockwave could very well kill the targets (the impact alone would turn them into pudding). The only way I could possibly see them surviving is if they turned into a gas of some sort. But against a target that is a liquid life form, it would work fairly well.
And into gas they can turn.

http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Changeling

And have a certain resistance to disruptor shots, which are considered by many to be phasers with a different name. Phasers, the technobabble weapon by excellence when needs to be.
Either that's a pointless argument to make since only those weapons were used against the planet, or you're arguing that aside of the shockwave, phasers and torps would directly damage the mantle and account for most of the destruction. That is just so wrong, because it would require yields which consequences on the planet would have been clearly observed.
Even more, it would mean the major part of the damage would be made with the standard side of weapons, not the exotic shockwave add-on, which means you'd be arguing for an insane standard firepower.
Not really, we saw only the opening bombardment; the shockwaves were indeed massive, but they only fired a few torpeodes (out of like what, 300 each? For a nice rounding of 3,000 torpedoes?) and phaser/disruptor shots.
And? How does this disprove the fact that there were no observable massive fireball, massive crust cracking, or indication of the sudden loos of 30% of the crust' mass?
It does not, the point fails there, flat.
Both weapons had the same effects.
Not per say true, I don't think we ever got a real visual on what the phasers/disruptors did.
We see no difference between the effects of disruptors and torps. The evidence pretty much says no difference. Claiming there is any, despite these weapons seen striking at different parts of the planet, would require solid evidence to counter the sameness which is observed.
It only weakens the theory even more.
Excuse me, but I asked a simple question. Or are you doubting that we should see such effects with gigatons of firepower.
Or do you think the plasma is special?
Your question is confusing because I have no idea what you're talking about context wise, but I'll take a stab.

These weapons may or may not be special; if it is Romulan Plasma weapons, well, they also use trilithium...which is known for stopping all reactions in a star. Possibly why one wouldn't see massive fireballs.
The whole plasma term in the name suggested that the damaged had to do with ionized gas, which unless it would be exotically and terribly cold for some reason, would more likely be very hot at some point in the weapon's design. Hence my request for fireballs.

Now, if it stops reactions, it's endothermic, and thus makes for an absolutely shitty weapon against rock. I don't even see how making the rocky crust cold qualifies as destruction.
Of course, the consumption of energy would be completely counter intuitive to the creation of a shockwave, for example.
But would fail at killing non solids, especially non solids which can turn in gas and live in space. You'd need something more significant than a kinetic wave.
Point on the gas argument, but again, the Founder would be broken up into a million pieces in his liquid form, which should be significant enough to kill it. The gas is a point, as is escaping to the atmosphere, but I'm not sure they knew that or had a better idea. Granted, they should have known it and perhaps they had a plan for it, but the attack was from surprise; they may have hoped that they Founders would be caught off guard quickly enough to take care of them.
Actually, you made me think of something rather cool for my idea.

Their first volley would have only destroyed 30% of the crust. What does it mean?
You can look at it by either thinking it's about surface area, overall quantity, or thickness.

In the first case, surface area, 30% of the crust being attacked (and yet without much terrible effects on the surface for what we could see from space), this would leave 70% intact until the next volley.
Which would simply leave too much time for Founders to actually adopt a way to resist to the attack.

In the second case, which is more akin to attacking the crust from a radial volumetric standpoint, where the 30% of destruction would correspond to the total volume of matter destroyed in the sphere of influence of each impact, the problem would remain the same as above, that is, leaving the Founders time to react. Turn to gas and poof, the shockwave are useless.

The third option, however, tackles the event from the perspective of the destruction being about the amount of surface thickness being damaged. Since protomatter reactions expand over the surface of worlds, it would be easily argued that what we saw was whatever of the surface crawling effect which managed to affect the cloud layer, while as the effect would spread, expand, and loose in power, would keep rolling across the hills, but without reaching high enough to pierece through the cloud layer and be noticed. Like flying under the radar below a certain altitude, the least powerful last seconds of the effects would be masked from view.
Eventually, the first volley would have totally affected the surface, but not the entirety of the whole crust. Think as the 30% as the skin of an apple. Therefore, each new salvo would affect a deeper layer of the planet. Who knows that the protomatter would do. It would in theory affect any matter at the surface and turn it into something else. The Link would be most entirely affected (unless for some reason massive isolated pockets would be found in holes in the crust, but further bombardments would take care of this). The protomatter effect might even spread along the Link.
They faked their presence. That's *only* requiring a fake signal and jamming the rest. This is a far cry from claiming that the brown clouds are an optical illusion. Please provide evidence of this most far fetched claim.
Um, it basically was. Unless you want to explain why we saw large shockwaves like water in a pond killing the "Founders"? Of course, the fact that no one suggested anything was wrong is a point.
You realize that all this talk that's been going on for years, literally, is precisely to explain the existence of visual effects we take at face value, by considering that they happened, without pretending that they're a planetary scale illusion, right?

It also makes me wonder why you keep arguing then, why you think you need a theory of some kind, if this is an illusion, and anything can be an illusion and pretty much made up.

Again, sending signals to a planet to fake the emission that the Link would generate is much likely easier to do than suddenly create a whole visual illusion, and I'm sorry, but until you provide strong evidence for your illusion, this argument is moot.

Of course, I'm hard pressed to go check for every single episode featuring a torpedo going off or a disruptor hitting a target to see if all unshielded matter around is destroyed by a further subspace shockwave.
Not to mention that you don't "carry" a disruptor, and that from the moment you can fire it at this yield, you can fire it at the same yields against other targets.
I've already explained that we really didn't see any phsyical reactions to the disruptors...
This is extremely vague actually, and I don't recall we went deep into the headline topic of "Disruptors seen creating subspace shockwaves on targts!".
... and the mantle issue is fairly easy to wave off due to the special functions of the weapon itself.
No. Not at all. Read above, there's a vast difference of scale between what would be needed to achieve that, and what Trek ships are regularly capable of.
You realize that you're just saying these weapons were standard weapons with yields up. Which means, yes, these uber weapons would easily be standard weapons on thier own from the moment the Roms and Cards would enhanced their power, which by your logic, we've seen them do.
I am suggesting that most of the power that we saw was doen by the torpedoes, not the disruptors. Of course, since the weapon itself interacts differntly with matter than it does agianst shields and special materials, your argument is fairly silly.
Hardly, and we already went there, but I understand why you want to brush it off with your "silly" labels. But I'm OK to go into it again (after that lenghty talk we had at SBC about it, before Kyosanom would become the ugly parade monster people would toss peanuts at).
As a point of comparison, the phasers of the E-D could dig a hole through hunders or thousands of kilometers of rock in little time, but the diameter wasn't enormous.
Now, when you consider the power of these phasers against shielded ships, you observe a certain ratio, and notice how many shots such weapons need to damage shields.
We could come with an arbitrary scale that against matter, the phaser can deal petawatts of damage, against shields, terawatts.

Then we move to TDiC disruptors. The scale is mangitudes superior, which obviously, would find a parallel in how it affects shields as well. It would be proportional.
With planetary destructive effects which would equal magnitudes worth the very high gigatons or sit right through the teraton scale, the disruptors would logically scale towards shields proportionally.

Yet, you're pretending that disruptors which could NDF and melt or vapourize 30% of a crust would offer no vastly overkill advantage against the traditional shields found on Jemhadar bugs.

Sure, you could say why not? Why couldn't the Romulans have more or less standard weapons capable of blasting 30% of a crust, but not offer any significant overkill advantage against the random advanced civilization's battleship?

My reply would be that I don't see how could develop such a weapon with massive gains about their effects on matter, yet offer no hugely major advantage against shielded or specially armoured targets.
My second reply would be that even if this was possible, the planet showed zero sign of such large scale NDF effects.
My third reply would be that these powerful torpedoes didn't have any particular greater effects to the point where the Romulan and Cardassian ships would have saved themselves more than if they had to rely on more conventional and traditional firepower.
Nevermind that these super cranked up weapons didn't make a difference against the typical Dominion ships.
Said high-level torpedoes would be incredibly expensive and would probably result in the other side using weapons. Basically the weapons that the Tal Shiar and the Obsidian Order were using were considered illeagle by the code of war and by the Alpha races in general.
Who gives? We're talking about saving their asses at any cost there. The very fact that they attempted destroying a planet pretty much screws any war conventions, so the question is completely moot.

Not to say that this escalation of firepower is most absurd when battles against ships only involve the safety of people aboard these ships. It would go the exact opposite way actually: firing the most powerful shots first.
It's so used as an easy cop out in debates but it's downright absurd and lame. It doesn't resist to any logic as long as space battles are concerned.
This is often considered to be the worst episode of Voyager. Its writer, Brannon Braga, in an interview on the DVD release of season 2, called the episode "a royal steaming stinker". The breaking of the warp 10 barrier is stated in the episode itself to be impossible, yet nonetheless happens; the Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual had explained that warp 10 meant infinite speed and thus was effectively meaningless. As a result, the episode was later struck from canon, with Tom Paris explicitly saying in a later episode he'd "never been to transwarp."

Not only I take Voyager's numbers with a big grain of salt, but this is a gem, really.
Wow, now if only you had proof that it was struck from the canon, because all episodes, movies, and the like are canon, even if they suck ass. Paris saying that he never flew at transwarp is clearly false; he has, as was clearly proven by the episode itself.
Yet he said he didn't go there, and no one corrected him despite the whole fuzz this experiment turned out to be.
My point is that the people behind Voyager were clearly ready to literally ignore episodes they had previously written. This clearly deals a huge blow to the credibility of the data coming from this show.
So we're still stuck with two problems, one being the energy generation issue, which is nonsensical otherwise the UFP has ships running on potential exatons of energy, and secondly, how again are you supposed to remove the atmosphere with a single explosion which, although leaving a large scorch mark, didn't dent the planet like an apple.
That would be a crater actually. Of course, I would rather like to think they used some other method than just half an ounce of magic antimatter, perhaps using the antimatter was only a trigger for the sub-space bomb they put down there.
Subspace. The magic word. :/
And how does your "subpace" solves the problem that you need to deliver large amounts of energy equally and over a certain period to push the atmosphere away from a planet if in the end, you want to keep the planet rather intact safe for that singular and rather flat crater (which apparently cooled down stupidly fast btw)?

Seriously...
Warp fields are a cheat and don't look much relevant to the topic at hand.
A cheat? As in how?
As in they break the laws of physics and bend space. Once you can bend space time, and therefore all laws related to this ensemble, including anything about forces and gravity, you cheat them, you get to do things that more conventional technology and, above all, given amounts of energy wouldn't let you do.
Yeah, been there done that. Let me guess, they again used the exotic warpfield tech?
No.
They just changed the trajectory of that pulse thing without using the warp field?
Please point me to calcs showing by how much they changed the trajectory, and how long it took them to do so.
Again, this was adressed, you wank it out. He said smoking cinder, and there's no need for it to be absolutely ultra literal.
He didn't say smoking cinder; I was paraphrasing. He said cinder. I was guessing that he was refering to the planet's surface. Which would probably mean that the Defiant's entire invantory and firepower could do that to a planet given time. He didn't indicate that they could bring all that power to bear however; just that the ship could easily eradicate the planet's population.
Which is much open to interpretation.
A ship carrying a good number of quantum torps, a full stock of possibly low gigatons of antimatter top, which can be fired through hoses (phasers) to maximize efficiency (more surface touched, less focused explosions like with nukes) and has NDF effects to count on could indeed, with enough time, screw up a planet, no doubt about that.
But don't go thinking about worlds covered with oceans of newly formed super hot lava.
Depends what you mean by disputing the canon status. If it means "it's present in an episode but is ludicrous to the highest degree for a wide variety of reasons, from continuity to science plausibility", then yes, I dump it.
Despite the fact that canon doesn't contradict it? The fact that its clearly a powerful weapon stronger than what they normally use?
Canon doesn't contradict it? That's a joke. Your bomb, which threw the E-Nil far far away at such a speed, would have needed to be massively powerful.
But please, instead of being vague, give me the details of the calculation that would show how that multi megaton torp thrusted the E-Nil.
The UFP surely attempted to prove, despite the first failure, that it was a good tech at planetary scales, right. Where are those other planets fully terraformed with the help of one single device again?
You may also look at notes which tell you how to build a thing, but if there's an important detail you don't even understand, it's not going to work.
Possibly hundreds
Possibly zero yes.
; we only have three known instances of terraforming.
On limited scales without clear descriptions of the methods or even involvement of protomatter.
The first was Wrath of Khan.
So you're leaving out the cave?
With the crew working on the Genesis device, before the issues. This example obviously does not qualify as a proof of a decent legacy.

You're talking about the nebula.
It's even less relevant. The tech was used by a robber who knew nothing about the design, no matter how smart he was.
The secon was in TNG, which a few scienists are being killed off. We aren't really shown much, but they were apparently digging into the planet for some unexplained reason. Nor was there any evidence that they had actually introduced the Genesis device/ technology to the planet at any point.
Please more details.
The third indication is DS9, where we have protomatter, something that was part of the original Genesis device's design, used by a terraformer to re-ignite a star. Likelyhood of him using it on the other planets is also very possible, but not likely on such a massive scale. It is clear however, that the technology works.
But it was never established he used protomatter for those.
So here we are, have three examples, one of which we see no actual terraforming. The first is a failure, but was an unstable experiment that was performed by someone whose knowledge was 300 years out of date, performed in a nebula rather than on the planet, and create a planet and a star from scratch. There are so many issues here that any scientist would easily dismiss this as an accurate test of Genesis's potential since it was used in an uncontrolled enviroment (wrong one at that, it would be like trying to use a air plane in space and expecting the test to give you accurat results for normal travel on a planet) and opperated by a primitive who probably didn't do it right. Furthermore, only one or two of the scientists died from the results of STII and STIII and most of the intel was saved. Furthermore, there were caverns where the effects of genesis was shown to be working properly without problem that they could study even if all the people had died (which they didn't). Then we have a terraformer over a hundred years later who has performed many wonders with a quote that he uses the same substance that was part of the Genesis's matrix, suggesting that the two technolgies are the same, although the later more advanced. We see that his works are successful and that even his later and most ambitious test was also successful.

But according to your argument, protomatter is uber rare, is a lost technology,and apparently have no evidence of it working on a grand scale such as a planet, despite the fact that it worked on basically rebooting a star.
Protomatter is not a technology.

The technology is the tools to master and use protomatter in given ways.
So it could have been the equivalent of a giant ball of TNT for all we know.
All large explosions tend to cause sub-space shockwaves.
Not if they're, you know, non exotic watzizit.
The shockwave would travel through matter and break solids, it wouldn't exactly push it away.
In the end, we know nothing about the quantity of reactants that went up, so bringing this incident was not useful.
Pardon? It doesn't matter if the shield, granted by some holy miracle, would have protected that segment of the planet against an internal explosion (we'll also not notice the attempt at wanking up Klingon shields in the process), since what matters is how can that lump of stuff drifting in space can still retain the atmosphere and all the blue stuff at the surface like if the whole mass of the planet still existed.
Even if there was a shield (>_>) it would be looking like a huge opaque blob.
No, the explosion occured on Praxis; the Klingon moon that orbits their planet. Judging the shields of the planet by that would be pretty hard given we don't know the distance.
I thought you tried to rationalize the issue I brought by saying Praxis had shields.
Let's just say that Praxis was covered with an ore which was deep blue.
As I said above, without knowing the quantity of reactants which blew up, we know nothing about the power of this, and therefore this is entirely useless as to argue for super wankaton yields even in favour of the Klingons.

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Mith
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Post by Mith » Wed Oct 08, 2008 5:00 am

Mr. Oragahn wrote:Tactical Cubes appeared later in the series, and were very rare. The mighty large Cubes still represented the most obvious and unstoppable assault force the Borg used.
As for the Romulans having to deal with the Borg, you're merely showing that the Romulans were concerned as well. Not proving that the UFP was a minor group.
You plan to go on for how long about this?
I'm sure you're exploited all possible arguments by now and you're still not showing anything to prove your initial assertion.
Excuse me? Since when has the Borg ever been shown to be especially interested in the Federation. Technology they can all gain from a few attacks on UFP space...they don't need to assimilate a large portion of it. Industry and space wise they don't seem all that interested...so please tell me where the Borg are so desperately in need of assimilating the UFP.

In fact, the fact that the Borg only attack every few years suggest they are using the UFP to come up with more inventive technologies. History shows us that confilct causes advancements in weapons technology. this is even reflected with the UFP itself; after their first attack upon the Federation they built the USS Defiant. Further conflict saw the development of the Prometheus and Soveriegn class. Quantum torpedoes, regenerative shielding, ablative hull armor, and many other things were created because the UFP was pushed into a conflict. So after the intial attack, the Collective probably decided to wait every so often after an attack to allow the UFP to develop more advanced technology for them to assimilate, as well as to develop new forms of adapting to new technology.

Otherwise, I fail to understand why they wouldn't send a hundred or hell, even five ships to take the UFP.
It's part of the suggestion. Protomatter does wonders against matter. It seems to be fine to alter the state of matter. It doesn't mean it wouldn't be effective as part of a weapon against shielded ships, but it does not look like it's known for its effects on shields.
In the end, this is merely part of the theory, in addition to the main reason I mentionned protomatter.
There is no evidence to suggest that shields are naturally moe resistant than matter. Nor do we have reason to believe they were using protomatter.
I've seen Founders turn into gas. That shockwave is, at best, going to exerce a pressure on them, but they have like a whole atmosphere to drift along and compensate for the overpressure.
I'd like to know the details about a Founder dying because its "drops" were spread out too far from each other.
Also, what happens if the shockwave happens to push a Founder into a hole or cave or so?
How about more importantly, the crash of the Jem'Hadar bug? The impact lethally wounded the Founder and it eventually died. There is clearly a limit to their durability.
Even more, as the Link, the Founders are one and a great ocean. All a shockwave will do is create a tidal wave. The Founders at the surface might turn into spray and die, the other underneath would be fine, athough shocked and moved up and down.
So there is no way to damage a gas so more that it is no longer the same gas?
It's also terribly impossible to achieve for these people. The amount of matter to either vapourized in so few shots, or to NDF away, is mind boggling, and no Trek ship has reached anything close to that.
Is there some sort of apparent limit that contradicts me that you aren't letting onto?
That's fine if you only gloss over the amount of energy to turn the molten matter into gas, and even more to provide enough power to do so as to affect a mantle in its entirety.
From the moment they could that on a planet, they could fire the same stuff at ships, yet their weapons didn't show more potent against Dominion ships and I'm fairly sure Dominion ships don't rate in the high gigaton/teraton craze.
Seeing as how phaser rifles can vaporize targets with a few megawatts of power, I really don't think that is a problem.

And what are you talking about with the Dominion ships.
And into gas they can turn.

http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Changeling

And have a certain resistance to disruptor shots, which are considered by many to be phasers with a different name. Phasers, the technobabble weapon by excellence when needs to be.
I hardly care what some people think, given that there is a difference between the two. And being resistant to a few disruptor shots set to kill and ship mounted weapons is a hell of a lot different. By thousands of magnitude.
And? How does this disprove the fact that there were no observable massive fireball, massive crust cracking, or indication of the sudden loos of 30% of the crust' mass?
It does not, the point fails there, flat.
Who said anything about 30% of the planet's surface?
We see no difference between the effects of disruptors and torps. The evidence pretty much says no difference. Claiming there is any, despite these weapons seen striking at different parts of the planet, would require solid evidence to counter the sameness which is observed.
It only weakens the theory even more.
...And how do we not know that one effect is not overshadowing the others.
The whole plasma term in the name suggested that the damaged had to do with ionized gas, which unless it would be exotically and terribly cold for some reason, would more likely be very hot at some point in the weapon's design. Hence my request for fireballs.

Now, if it stops reactions, it's endothermic, and thus makes for an absolutely shitty weapon against rock. I don't even see how making the rocky crust cold qualifies as destruction.
Of course, the consumption of energy would be completely counter intuitive to the creation of a shockwave, for example.
But would fail at killing non solids, especially non solids which can turn in gas and live in space. You'd need something more significant than a kinetic wave.
Unless the combination of trilithium and plasma is used to make a powerful sub-space shockwave, but the effect is a lack of fireball. After all, if the trilithium didn't add anything to the explosion, why have it?
Actually, you made me think of something rather cool for my idea.

Their first volley would have only destroyed 30% of the crust. What does it mean?
You can look at it by either thinking it's about surface area, overall quantity, or thickness.

In the first case, surface area, 30% of the crust being attacked (and yet without much terrible effects on the surface for what we could see from space), this would leave 70% intact until the next volley.
Which would simply leave too much time for Founders to actually adopt a way to resist to the attack.

In the second case, which is more akin to attacking the crust from a radial volumetric standpoint, where the 30% of destruction would correspond to the total volume of matter destroyed in the sphere of influence of each impact, the problem would remain the same as above, that is, leaving the Founders time to react. Turn to gas and poof, the shockwave are useless.

The third option, however, tackles the event from the perspective of the destruction being about the amount of surface thickness being damaged. Since protomatter reactions expand over the surface of worlds, it would be easily argued that what we saw was whatever of the surface crawling effect which managed to affect the cloud layer, while as the effect would spread, expand, and loose in power, would keep rolling across the hills, but without reaching high enough to pierece through the cloud layer and be noticed. Like flying under the radar below a certain altitude, the least powerful last seconds of the effects would be masked from view.
Eventually, the first volley would have totally affected the surface, but not the entirety of the whole crust. Think as the 30% as the skin of an apple. Therefore, each new salvo would affect a deeper layer of the planet. Who knows that the protomatter would do. It would in theory affect any matter at the surface and turn it into something else. The Link would be most entirely affected (unless for some reason massive isolated pockets would be found in holes in the crust, but further bombardments would take care of this). The protomatter effect might even spread along the Link.
Okay, what? Why would their weapons be 70% less effective than something from a hundred years ago? Nor does Genesis only effect the surface of the whatever it touches; it goes down into the ground and can be used to create water, alter atmosphere, and even create mountains.
You realize that all this talk that's been going on for years, literally, is precisely to explain the existence of visual effects we take at face value, by considering that they happened, without pretending that they're a planetary scale illusion, right?

It also makes me wonder why you keep arguing then, why you think you need a theory of some kind, if this is an illusion, and anything can be an illusion and pretty much made up.
It was stated that the presence of life forms was an illusion. One might ask why the planet didn't have the visible ocean of Founders on it otherwise. Clearly, their sensors were being tricked into seeing a sea of Founders when there wasn't one.
Again, sending signals to a planet to fake the emission that the Link would generate is much likely easier to do than suddenly create a whole visual illusion, and I'm sorry, but until you provide strong evidence for your illusion, this argument is moot.
The illusion doesn't literally have to be existent, like a an ocean of goop or a holographic display; but rather an illusion on their sensors, similar to what Worf did in TNG by using a trick to fool both the Ferengi ship that another Galaxy class starship was entering the area.

No. Not at all. Read above, there's a vast difference of scale between what would be needed to achieve that, and what Trek ships are regularly capable of.
Again, given the fact that the phasers/disruptors don't need as much heat to perform their function, it rather does make sense that it would be much easier.
Hardly, and we already went there, but I understand why you want to brush it off with your "silly" labels. But I'm OK to go into it again (after that lenghty talk we had at SBC about it, before Kyosanom would become the ugly parade monster people would toss peanuts at).
As a point of comparison, the phasers of the E-D could dig a hole through hunders or thousands of kilometers of rock in little time, but the diameter wasn't enormous.
It was drilling a hole, why would it need to cause massive damage?
Now, when you consider the power of these phasers against shielded ships, you observe a certain ratio, and notice how many shots such weapons need to damage shields.
We could come with an arbitrary scale that against matter, the phaser can deal petawatts of damage, against shields, terawatts.
Then we move to TDiC disruptors. The scale is mangitudes superior, which obviously, would find a parallel in how it affects shields as well. It would be proportional.
With planetary destructive effects which would equal magnitudes worth the very high gigatons or sit right through the teraton scale, the disruptors would logically scale towards shields proportionally.
The right materials can be used to resist phasers fairly efficiently. Crates and such made of special material can actually resist phaser shots even at higher levels because of it. So clearly, the right materials can massively reduce the efficiency of phasers.
Yet, you're pretending that disruptors which could NDF and melt or vapourize 30% of a crust would offer no vastly overkill advantage against the traditional shields found on Jemhadar bugs.
That is massively dependant on the way phasers work themselves. Not that I'm going for the 30% claim...
Sure, you could say why not? Why couldn't the Romulans have more or less standard weapons capable of blasting 30% of a crust, but not offer any significant overkill advantage against the random advanced civilization's battleship?
You do realize that by the time they fired it, the shockwave would have very likely have screwed them over as well, right?

The rest later.

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Mr. Oragahn
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Post by Mr. Oragahn » Sun Oct 12, 2008 6:44 pm

I'm going to leave the Borg stuff aside. I'm not interested in this discussion.
Mith wrote:
It's part of the suggestion. Protomatter does wonders against matter. It seems to be fine to alter the state of matter. It doesn't mean it wouldn't be effective as part of a weapon against shielded ships, but it does not look like it's known for its effects on shields.
In the end, this is merely part of the theory, in addition to the main reason I mentionned protomatter.
There is no evidence to suggest that shields are naturally moe resistant than matter. Nor do we have reason to believe they were using protomatter.
For the first, it's due to the fact that as a whole, phasers don't make large patches of armour or shields disappear unless the yields are pumped up, and this only concerns matter, even engineered structures, not shields. It's also the logic that while rock wouldn't naturally come with a natural defense against the NDF effects of phasers, shields would. Considering the amount of meaningless technobabble Trek races come with on a frequent basis, tricks and devices which are most of the time exceptional, it would be quite surprising that they couldn't have shields be more effective against something as common as phasers than say armour would.

The protomatter is known to alter matter, however it's certainly not a given that it would be much effectve against a force field you know.
If the Genesis device is worth the comparison, just look at the effects it was supposed to have on the surface a planet, to what a standard torpedo of the same size would have against the shields of a ship, or even on the surface of the same world.
Protomatter allows chain reactions on matter. You gain a lot for little in terms of needed volume, but it's much likely that protomatter used against a shield would end like a rabit fart. It wouldn't add anything, hence why the Romulan and Cardassian ships were so owned by the standard Dominion forces.

For the second, it's from the theory. The reason why I think protomatter would be involved is explained before.
I've seen Founders turn into gas. That shockwave is, at best, going to exerce a pressure on them, but they have like a whole atmosphere to drift along and compensate for the overpressure.
I'd like to know the details about a Founder dying because its "drops" were spread out too far from each other.
Also, what happens if the shockwave happens to push a Founder into a hole or cave or so?
How about more importantly, the crash of the Jem'Hadar bug? The impact lethally wounded the Founder and it eventually died. There is clearly a limit to their durability.
Wait. Is that a reply to my question, or a sidetrack, as you reference the equivalent of a man being splattered by an asteroid or something?
Please be much more specific, and please consider that the Founders would have been united as the Link.
Even more, as the Link, the Founders are one and a great ocean. All a shockwave will do is create a tidal wave. The Founders at the surface might turn into spray and die, the other underneath would be fine, athough shocked and moved up and down.
So there is no way to damage a gas so more that it is no longer the same gas?
It depends on the method used, but gas has more flexibility than say water, and a shockwave that would move molecules is certainly having the same effect as a massive amount of energy that would ionize said gas or chemically alter it so it wouldn't be the same gas. Plus an ocean of water is still a vastly larger target to deal with than a single watery elemental of some sort which can be ripped to droplets.
I'll wait for your data on the splattering incident you mentionned above to see what to think of that.

There's also the fact that Changelings have such variable volumetric capability that they could be compressed or expanded a great deal before they'd be effectively destroyed.

Besides, the brown shockwaves are actually persistant ripples, which hardly fits with the idea of one swooping giant shockwave per weapon.
It's also terribly impossible to achieve for these people. The amount of matter to either vapourized in so few shots, or to NDF away, is mind boggling, and no Trek ship has reached anything close to that.
Is there some sort of apparent limit that contradicts me that you aren't letting onto?
It's more like do you have any evidence of phasers being able to NDF a whole chain of mountains and the surrounding Earth in one shot?
I don't think so.
That's fine if you only gloss over the amount of energy to turn the molten matter into gas, and even more to provide enough power to do so as to affect a mantle in its entirety.
From the moment they could that on a planet, they could fire the same stuff at ships, yet their weapons didn't show more potent against Dominion ships and I'm fairly sure Dominion ships don't rate in the high gigaton/teraton craze.
Seeing as how phaser rifles can vaporize targets with a few megawatts of power, I really don't think that is a problem.
You're clearly missing the issue about the magnitude here.
Check the question above, please.
And into gas they can turn.

http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Changeling

And have a certain resistance to disruptor shots, which are considered by many to be phasers with a different name. Phasers, the technobabble weapon by excellence when needs to be.
I hardly care what some people think, given that there is a difference between the two. And being resistant to a few disruptor shots set to kill and ship mounted weapons is a hell of a lot different. By thousands of magnitude.
Not when your target is, like, vast oceans covering a planet.
This actually probably argues against any theory about those weapons being disruptors and torps with cranked up NDF effects.
Not only, again, there's no subsidiary effect of a sudden massive disappearance of matter on a planetary scale, but the fact that a Founder is to tough against disruptors, which have NDF effects (hardly surprising considering the name), is indicating that it's not the right theory to look at.
And? How does this disprove the fact that there were no observable massive fireball, massive crust cracking, or indication of the sudden loos of 30% of the crust' mass?
It does not, the point fails there, flat.
Who said anything about 30% of the planet's surface?
I'm not sure we even understand each other.
You argued that the mantle would be largely affected by the weapons' most standard mean of destruction, either sheer energy or NDF, but I pointed out that the extent of such destruction, necessary to affect the mantle like described, would obviously be noticed when the weapons were first used, on the planet's surface.
The fact that nothing of that happens rather shows that the weapons would certainly not destroy the mantle via sheer energy (brute force vapourization) or NDF.
We see no difference between the effects of disruptors and torps. The evidence pretty much says no difference. Claiming there is any, despite these weapons seen striking at different parts of the planet, would require solid evidence to counter the sameness which is observed.
It only weakens the theory even more.
...And how do we not know that one effect is not overshadowing the others.
Check the bombardment sequence.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RgihmmLY75Y

There are zones only hit by disruptors not even remotely hit by torps, yet the effects are the same. Globally, torps do large brown waves than disruptors.
Actually, all weapons fire at very specific areas, so no torp hits where a disruptor beam has hit, and vice versa.

Which means your initial point...
One would think it would do some pretty impressive damage to the surface. Of course, I would more likely count on the phasers and disruptors to do most of the damage to the crust and mantle; the torpedoes are for reducing the population and add on damage.
...is not valid anymore.
Unless the combination of trilithium and plasma is used to make a powerful sub-space shockwave, but the effect is a lack of fireball. After all, if the trilithium didn't add anything to the explosion, why have it?
It obviously didn't add anything in terms of brute force. Whatever it did is hardly measurable, therefore the element cannot really be used to favour a theory in particular, unless you think you have stronger point to make.
Actually, you made me think of something rather cool for my idea.

Their first volley would have only destroyed 30% of the crust. What does it mean?
You can look at it by either thinking it's about surface area, overall quantity, or thickness.

In the first case, surface area, 30% of the crust being attacked (and yet without much terrible effects on the surface for what we could see from space), this would leave 70% intact until the next volley.
Which would simply leave too much time for Founders to actually adopt a way to resist to the attack.

In the second case, which is more akin to attacking the crust from a radial volumetric standpoint, where the 30% of destruction would correspond to the total volume of matter destroyed in the sphere of influence of each impact, the problem would remain the same as above, that is, leaving the Founders time to react. Turn to gas and poof, the shockwave are useless.

The third option, however, tackles the event from the perspective of the destruction being about the amount of surface thickness being damaged. Since protomatter reactions expand over the surface of worlds, it would be easily argued that what we saw was whatever of the surface crawling effect which managed to affect the cloud layer, while as the effect would spread, expand, and loose in power, would keep rolling across the hills, but without reaching high enough to pierece through the cloud layer and be noticed. Like flying under the radar below a certain altitude, the least powerful last seconds of the effects would be masked from view.
Eventually, the first volley would have totally affected the surface, but not the entirety of the whole crust. Think as the 30% as the skin of an apple. Therefore, each new salvo would affect a deeper layer of the planet. Who knows that the protomatter would do. It would in theory affect any matter at the surface and turn it into something else. The Link would be most entirely affected (unless for some reason massive isolated pockets would be found in holes in the crust, but further bombardments would take care of this). The protomatter effect might even spread along the Link.
Okay, what? Why would their weapons be 70% less effective than something from a hundred years ago?[/quote]

That's certainly not what I said, but thank you for trying though.
Nor does Genesis only effect the surface of the whatever it touches; it goes down into the ground and can be used to create water, alter atmosphere, and even create mountains.
Yes and?
It's not like I said they exactly fired Genesises at the Founders' homeworld either.
I just said that they used protomatter in a certain quantity, and since protomatter has various effects, from constructive to destructive ones, it allows room for my suggestion to work.
You realize that all this talk that's been going on for years, literally, is precisely to explain the existence of visual effects we take at face value, by considering that they happened, without pretending that they're a planetary scale illusion, right?

It also makes me wonder why you keep arguing then, why you think you need a theory of some kind, if this is an illusion, and anything can be an illusion and pretty much made up.
It was stated that the presence of life forms was an illusion. One might ask why the planet didn't have the visible ocean of Founders on it otherwise. Clearly, their sensors were being tricked into seeing a sea of Founders when there wasn't one.
It was quickly estimated to be the result of a transponder broadcasting fake signals.
Apples and oranges.
Again, sending signals to a planet to fake the emission that the Link would generate is much likely easier to do than suddenly create a whole visual illusion, and I'm sorry, but until you provide strong evidence for your illusion, this argument is moot.
The illusion doesn't literally have to be existent, like a an ocean of goop or a holographic display; but rather an illusion on their sensors, similar to what Worf did in TNG by using a trick to fool both the Ferengi ship that another Galaxy class starship was entering the area.
The theories are there to address the brown waves, which are irrelevant to what electronic or quantum sensors may read. We're speaking of eyeballs there.
I think we're done with that illusion claim.
Hardly, and we already went there, but I understand why you want to brush it off with your "silly" labels. But I'm OK to go into it again (after that lenghty talk we had at SBC about it, before Kyosanom would become the ugly parade monster people would toss peanuts at).
As a point of comparison, the phasers of the E-D could dig a hole through hunders or thousands of kilometers of rock in little time, but the diameter wasn't enormous.
It was drilling a hole, why would it need to cause massive damage?
It's an example of what it could do, but it's not shown anything better. Check the question in red please.
Now, when you consider the power of these phasers against shielded ships, you observe a certain ratio, and notice how many shots such weapons need to damage shields.
We could come with an arbitrary scale that against matter, the phaser can deal petawatts of damage, against shields, terawatts.
Then we move to TDiC disruptors. The scale is mangitudes superior, which obviously, would find a parallel in how it affects shields as well. It would be proportional.
With planetary destructive effects which would equal magnitudes worth the very high gigatons or sit right through the teraton scale, the disruptors would logically scale towards shields proportionally.
The right materials can be used to resist phasers fairly efficiently. Crates and such made of special material can actually resist phaser shots even at higher levels because of it. So clearly, the right materials can massively reduce the efficiency of phasers.
Please, those Jemhadar ships hardly are so sturdy. Couples of pulses from the Defiant, standard torps or phaser beams from standard ships get rid of them, and these weapons hardly tickle even the gigaton range, and those ships have hardly proved the ability to NDF entire countries in an instant.
Yet, you're pretending that disruptors which could NDF and melt or vapourize 30% of a crust would offer no vastly overkill advantage against the traditional shields found on Jemhadar bugs.
That is massively dependant on the way phasers work themselves. Not that I'm going for the 30% claim...
Which is a defensive argument which is just as vague as it can get, but is not as convincing as you hope it would.
The ships participating in this joint operation should have wept the floor with those Bugs, yet they got blown to smitherens by ships having standard firepower, even as we know that all effects of phasers and disruptors scale up proportionally. More, we also have enough evidence that there was no sign of massive NDF effect involved there.
Sure, you could say why not? Why couldn't the Romulans have more or less standard weapons capable of blasting 30% of a crust, but not offer any significant overkill advantage against the random advanced civilization's battleship?
You do realize that by the time they fired it, the shockwave would have very likely have screwed them over as well, right?
I'm afraid this totally fails to reply to my rather simple question.

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