359 wrote: No, I claim he said exactly what he said. The damping field blocks 99% of transmissions, which includes things like scans and transporter signals. Then I procede to claim what he didn't say:
359 wrote: When talking about the field and what id does, he completely failed to mention anything that directly affects the runabout, therefor there is no reason to assume it did.
359 wrote: O'Brian figuring out that the satellite was a threat was the reason for taking the runabout to a higher orbit, as stated here.
O'Brien: "The only thing that could block out a transponder signal is a broad band damping field. That requires a low level satellite system like this one. Suddenly we're being scanned by these satellites, so"
Dax: "Maybe they had something to do with our missing runabout."
O'Brien: "Exactly..."
Notice how he wasn't concerned until the satellites began to scan the runabout.
Check the definition of the word TRANSMISSION.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/transmission wrote: Full Definition of TRANSMISSION
1
: an act, process, or instance of transmitting <transmission of a nerve impulse across a synapse>
2
: the passage of radio waves in the space between transmitting and receiving stations; also : the act or process of transmitting by radio or television
3
: an assembly of parts including the speed-changing gears and the propeller shaft by which the power is transmitted from an engine to a live axle; also : the speed-changing gears in such an assembly
4
: something that is transmitted : message
Stars transmit energy to planets. The planet/moon is cloaked in night. The only light sources are artificial.
Sensor transmit energy into space, and then record what is reflected. The sensors were barely working by the standards that we normally see in Star Trek.
The shields transmit energy into space.
Miles and Dax got out of the field, but not out of what would be expected to be well within weapon range. They had to have viewed the damping field as the danger.
"Booby Trap"
GALEK SAR (on monitor): We have been stripped of all propulsion, and our weapons are useless. We cannot move and we cannot fight. The ship is being lashed with lethal radiation from the aceton assimilators concealed in the wreckage surrounding the
PICARD: Aceton assimilators?
DATA: Aceton assimilators are a primitive generator which can drain power from distant sources.
RIKER: Generators?
DATA: It would not be difficult to modify them to convert energy into radiation.
RIKER: The Menthars hide them in floating debris. An unsuspecting enemy ship flies in. Instant booby trap.
PICARD: And now we're supplying the devices with the energy to kill us.
359 wrote: No it is not normal, when in a dampen field that affects the ship they tend to notice. For example in VOY:"The Swarm":
Paris: "Captain, something is wrong."
Janeway: "What do you mean?"
Paris: "It's like there's a drag on the engines."
Kim: "Captain, sensors indicate a resonance particle wave. It's dampening our warp field. We're losing speed."
Neither O'Brian nor Dax, both very intelligent people, noticed anything wrong with the runabout. No power drain, no loss in engines, no drain in shields. The only thing they noticed to be out of place was they were not receiving a signal from the downed runabout's transporter. So the field was clearly not having any effect in the runabout.
Your own quote says that Voyager didn't spot the damping field directly, and had already fallen prey to it.
359 wrote: Yes, but would those phasers be capable of taking down a runabout's shields? Would they need to charge like Dukat's phasers in DS9: "Return to Grace"? Would they need to charge even longer? Would they be type-IV phasers like were used on a type-6 shuttle? We do not have an answer for many of these questions. Given an hour to charge they could put off a beam of a couple kilotons, a week about a megaton.
Who knows, small phaser banks have to be good for shooting something, and runabouts are just larger warp capable shuttles. They are stated to have repeatedly up graded the Runabouts less then a year later implying the defenses were found wanting.
We don't know enough about what constitutes a small phaser bank, and what constitutes a type 5 planetary disruptor. We never see them on screen.
359 wrote: Quark was advertising the weapon, trying to show it off. Anyone can rattle off a weapon's specifications, but he was trying to show off what it can do so the customer would buy some. This doesn't say anything about it being super effective against shields, or reactive armor. Those were the examples Quark chose in order to impress the would be buyer.
Which means not all the compilable weapons have the same capabilities.
359 wrote: And no, it has never been directly stated or even implied that a weapon's effect is mostly independent of it's yield. Sure there are a few special cases, but out of hundreds of episodes those are only a couple. So they are far, far from being normal.
Yield is never mentioned implying that it is the weapon, and not the yield that is the issue.
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season: 1
Episode: 20
Heart Of Glory wrote: WORF: Still, your weapons were limited and their ship superior.
KORRIS: Yes. All we had was an ancient battery of Merculite rockets. Our only chance was to trick them into lowering their shields.
KONMEL: We reduced power and lured them in.
KORRIS: They suspected nothing.
KONMEL: Then, when they lowered their shields to beam over a boarding party, we opened fire.
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season: 4
Episode: 4
Suddenly Human wrote: PICARD: Mister Data, what's their offensive potential?
DATA: Talarian warships are limited to neutral particle weapons, high energy X-ray lasers and merculite rockets. No match for the Enterprise, Captain.
PICARD: The last thing I want is to be forced into destroying one of their ships.
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Season: 2
Episode: 4
The Outrageous Okona wrote: PICARD: Lasers can't even penetrate our navigation shields. Don't they know that?
RIKER; Regulations so call for a Yellow Alert.
PICARD: A very old regulation. Well, make it so, Number One. And reduce speed. Drop main shields as well.
RIKER: May I ask why, sir?
PICARD: In case we decide to surrender to them, Number One.
As I understand it, there is no upper limit as to how powerful a laser can be, and a rocket's yeild is based on the warthead's size which can vary even if the same explosive is used in two different models.
Conversely
Franchise: Star Trek
Series: The Next Generation
Season: 07
Episode: 15
Title: Lower Decks wrote: LAFORGE: Another two seconds. Okay, that's enough.
TAURIK: Sir, I'm a little puzzled. Why are we intentionally damaging the shuttlecraft?
LAFORGE: We're evaluating hull resiliency. Starfleet requires periodic testing.
TAURIK: I see. I don't believe I'm familiar with that requirement.
LAFORGE: Probably because you're not a senior officer.
TAURIK: If you wish, I could reconfigure the phaser to fire a low intensity burst that would not harm the shuttle's hull. The test procedure would not be affected.
LAFORGE: It's fine the way it is. Now, give me another burst, about four seconds, right here.
TAURIK: Do you want me to fire from this position?
LAFORGE: Actually, why don't you do it from over here.
TAURIK: That would be consistent.
LAFORGE: Consistent with what?
TAURIK: With making it appear that this shuttle had fled an attack.
LAFORGE: What makes you think that's what we're doing?
TAURIK: The pattern of fire you have asked for is similar to what might result if the shuttle had fled an attacker while engaging in evasive manoeuvres.
LAFORGE: It's an amazing coincidence.
TAURIK: Yes, sir. It is indeed. Shall we proceed with the testing?
LAFORGE: Yes, Ensign. Thank you.
Franchise: Star Trek
Series: The Next Generation
Season: 05
Episode: 17
Title: The Outcast wrote: [Shuttlebay]
(shuttle 15 Magellan, with Onizuku in the foreground)
SOREN: Is this the one?
RIKER: This is it. Short-range craft, two twelve hundred fifty millicochrane warp engines.
SOREN: Looks like microfusion thrusters.
RIKER: Right.
SOREN: Armament?
RIKER: None, usually. This one's been fitted with two type-four phaser emitters. We'll use those to chart the null space.
SOREN: Chart it?
RIKER: Mister La Forge wants to get an idea of the size of the pocket. He thinks the rate of energy absorption is linked to its size.
SOREN: I'm not sure how we go about mapping something we can't see.
RIKER: Well, that's where the emitters come in. We shoot out a series of photon pulses into the pocket and chart where each one disappears. From that we should get a fairly complete outline.
SOREN: Let's take a look at the controls.
[Shuttlecraft]
RIKER: Later we'll try a flight simulation. Right now let's do a systems review. I'll talk you through it.
SOREN: Let me try it. Propulsion system, transfer conduits. Where's the schematic reactor assembly? Oh, there it is. Engine nacelles. There's nothing here that's unfamiliar. Navigational deflector, redundant graviton polarity source generators.
RIKER: You handle these controls like you grew up in a shuttle.
SOREN: I did. My parents were pilots. I was flying with them before I could walk. And as soon as I was old enough, I entered flight school. Krite was my instructor.
RIKER: He had a good student.
SOREN: He? Commander, there are no he's or she's in a species without gender.
RIKER: Okay. For two days I've been trying to construct sentences without personal pronouns. Now I give up. What should I use? It? To us, that's rude.
SOREN: We use a pronoun which is neutral. I do not think there is really a translation.
RIKER: Then I'll just have to muddle through. So forgive me if a stray he or she slips by, okay?
SOREN: Well, if that's the systems review, I don't see any problem. What's next?
RIKER: Lunch.
A phaser rifle is expected to cut through a navigational deflector, and possibly even shields.
359 wrote: 1)The exact yield does not matter for this argument, and quite frankly I don't really care what it is. It's an extreme outlier.
An outlier with a few unknowns.
359 wrote: 2)Of course what she is reading off is relevant, it's all we know about the weapon.
You are assuming that what Kira was reading had a direct connection to the weapon's yield.
359 wrote: You keep coming up with all these ideas about why it should be super effective, or why the runabout is not in pristine shape, or even why the weapon should go through the shields. And this is all well and good, but, there is nothing in the episode to support anything outside of 'they were hit by a __(low) GJ discharge'. There is nothing to indicate anything unusual is going on.
If you want to keep making unfounded assumption why can't I?
359 wrote: If a human is shot somewhere critical they tend to "[loose] all power in every system at once."
Humans don't explode when they take damage to those sorts of systems while starships in Star Trek do.
359 wrote: And I see no reason to assume they used external power sources.
Sure they could use solar panels, but that isn't to different than a reactor, so it doesn't matter.
Check TNG: Booby Trap for the kind of energy collector I'm thinking of. It uses things like other star ships as the power source.
359 wrote: I really don't know. The effects are not incredibly precisely stated. Mostly dust clouds and impact craters, some shockwaves as well, but no stated scale of the events. And the asteroid was made of synthetic materials, so it would not burn up in the usual manor. And Tuvok stated that he destroyed most of the debris, except two fragments.
This sounds like a pretty big boom to me:
Voyager: Rise:
TUVOK: Substantial cratering, atmospheric shockwaves, and large concentrations of dust and other stratospheric contaminants.