Mike DiCenso wrote:Mr. Oragahn wrote:Do we know for a fact that the Borg gained anything of substance that gave them a upper hand for that battle?
The way the battle went, the fact that Picard would know about most of the strategies and tactics the fleet would use. The real kicker is that even before the battle, when the E-D fires off the deflector dish weapon and has no effect it is because of the Borg assimilating Picard's knowledge of it.
Is that the same dish that was running with terawatts of power, as per Riker?
A beam is still a beam though. The only difference it would make is if the Borg knew about it and, for example, put all or most of their shields over the area which they knew would be hit, because of the way the beam is fired: straight forward.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:Memory Alpha suggests that 40 seconds elapsed between the beginning of the assault and the moment a distress call was sent.
What matters as much as ship numbers if not more is just how long they could fire at the Borg Cube.
Here is the dialog regarding the opening of the battle:
TROI (on intercom): Bridge to Captain Picard.
PICARD: Go ahead.
TROI (on intercom): We've just received word from the fleet. They've engaged the Borg.
[Enterprise-E bridge]
PICARD: Data, put Starfleet frequency one four eight six on audio.
DATA: Aye sir.
FLEET COMMUNICATIONS: Flagship to Endeavor. Standby to engage at grid A-fifteen. ...Defiant and Bozeman, fall back to mobile position one. ...Acknowledge. ...We have it in visual range. A Borg cube on course zero point two one five, speed warp point nine six.
BORG COMMUNICATIONS: We are the Borg. Lower your shields and surrender your ships. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. Your culture will adapt to service us. Resistance is futile.
FLEET COMMUNICATIONS: All units open fire. ...They've broken through the defence perimeter. ... Continue to attack. ...We need reinforcements. ...Ninety-six dead and twenty-two wounded on the Lexington.
PICARD: Lieutenant Hawk. Set a course for Earth.
Note that the Defiant is there at beginging of the action Typhon sector.
Defiant and Bozeman are asked to "fall back to mobile position one". Doesn't really give the impression that they engaged the Cube right off the bat like other ships did.
The other interesting thing is that no one is sending out a "distress signal", just some chatter about wounded and dead on the Lexington.
Huhy, "we need reinforcements" on some open channel is close enough. Does it matter though? Ships were destroyed.
Further more, the inital dialog from Troi is while Riker and Picard are below decks in Picard's quarters discussing why the E-E was not sent to join the fight, so in addition to the 30 to 40 seconds of dialog when they are on the bridge, there have to be a couple or so minutes' time allocated for them to reach to bridge.
Couple or so minutes during an urgent time, for Picard and Riker to go from Picard's quarters to the bridge with some turbolift?
Where are those quarters? In the tailpipe of one of those nacelles?
Mr. Oragahn wrote:Yet they clearly don't fire torps at that rate of fire continuously.
Not in the closing part of the battle near Earth, since by that time the fleet would have been exausted. It's clear they'd been fighting all the way to Earth from the Typhon sector, and when the E-E arrives on hand and restores the fleet's cohesion, they fire very heavy torpedo volleys at the cube along with phasers.
The fact that they still had torps pretty much supports my point. Any sensible captain knowing a thing or two about an alpha strike would already be running on phasers only at that point.
And what's that story about cohesion? Don't you think your average captain wouldn't know about, I don't know... concentrating firepower on the same point, on and on? And wouldn't other captains notice some ships doing so, and would do the same? What about firing in the center of any face of that Cube? It's obviously going to be closest point to the Cube's center. Quite an obvious point to shoot at.
The only genius battle tactic the UFP would still have up their sleeves which the Borg could not adapt to would be ramming speed.
Seems like Mr. Brains was the smartest dude in that part of the galaxy that day...
Not to say, once again, that they don't even do it when they're given a target by Picard: any ship that fires torpedoes doesn't fire phasers at the same time.
Or when the Cube arrives, calmly, undisturbed. before the first hits. Do we see a spam of phasers and torps? No. Not at all.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:The fact that they still have anything to fire by then would actually undermine your point a lot, don't you think?
No, not really. Not as long as you understand that what I did in that little calculation exercise was using
averages.
You're kidding me? You calculated an average on the assumption that most torps were fired.
That's an average of a favourable assumption, an upper end.
Remember your
calculation:
You went with 100 ships and an average of 150-200 torps per ship.
Yet you claim 100 ships because of the large casualties. Obviously, there's a problem here, because if you have high casualties in a few minutes, you won't have each ship firing like 150-200 torps on the average. Far from that.
You said they had lost a dozen ships in a mere two minutes of fighting, at the battle of Sector 001.
That makes the survival rate of those ships about ten seconds. Or just long enough to eventually pass an order to fire
some torps.
Let's be generous and say 5 torps.
There, you have a count to start playing with.
And when we look at the battle, only the Defiant and the E-E, which has just arrived, are capable of sustaining hits without blowing up. ALL other ships explode when hit by a Borg torpedo or their green beams instantly blow up or get seriously damaged beyond any capacity to maintain the slimmest hope of combat capability.
Plus, there's another odd thing. It's from the battle between Voyager and the Borg coffin. We see that the photon torpedo's "warhead" charges up, with two lines of 6 rectangles already red, and four off. Looking at how long it took for the last rectangles to light up before the explosion, 4 seconds, we see that it would take full ten seconds for the warheads to be ready.
And that was for a megajoule yield by the way.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:Considerable as "its DET part is superior to the DET of a torp"?
No, I don't think so.
And again, why insist I'm establishing a false dilemma when the show and the movies pretty prove me right about the fact that Trek is not Macross and they don't spam with all they have at once, firing all types of weapons?
Phaser's don't have to be superior to the DET of a photon torpedo for them to contribute in a significant amount to the total energy absorbed by the cube.
Now I did take that into consideration in my little thought exercise, and you should bear that in mind as well.
I never said they had to be superior.
I simply left them out because to me, phasers or torps, that was about the same, even if I tend to put phasers below torps - but phasers have advantages like a focused area of fire (although I don't know if that matters for Trek shields) and that very useful NDF ability, and because I don't see any evidence that for any prolongated engagement, ships can fire both types of weapons.
That is why, above, I said "continuous". See your examples below:
Oh yes they do. In "Best of Both Worlds, Part 1 & 2", we see the E-D open fire with a barrage of both phasers and torpedoes. In "Arsenal of Freedom", the E-D opens fire with a simultaneous firing of torpedoes and phasers. In "The Survivors", we see the E-D fire torpedoes and phasers again at the same time at the illusionary Husnock vessel. The E-E fires phasers and torpedoes at the same time at the Scimitar once they got a good sighting on her.
What more do you need to know?
Simple. Does any one of those examples show a ship doing that combination of fire over more than one or two volleys?
Because that's pretty much essential to your argument (which is already moot as far as FC shows, as pointed out just above).
I also checked out the Nemesis case, because that's one of the few I can look at. There's combined fire when Picard orders to fire at will. However, it's not always achieved, and above all, we don't even have any proof that they had time to fully charge either torps or phasers when doing so.
Considering how long the battle lasted and the number of shots both sides took, it's almost like watching Star Wars instead of Trek. I'm pretty sure most people here have said at least once that a couple torpedoes were good enough to bring shields down.
In comparison, what we see in Nemesis is sticking out. Another reason to think they were favouring ROF over yield?
Reminds me of the spam in the new Trek movie, with torps fired at the Naranda along phasers. We know that at this ROF, phasers were just good enough to destroy unshielded missiles, nothing like terajoules or petajoules which would have vaporized nearby missiles through area effect destruction. That, from a ship which obviously was a step further on the offensive part.
Oh and DS9's battles, full of non combined fire.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:And what's that miraculous x100,000 factor you used there? Why should I even begin to accept the idea that that many torps were fired in total? It's totally absurd.
Again, it's an averaging. I'm not even using anywhere near the higher end. I even used 44 MT as part of the original calcs and I used 100 MT later to make a point, then gave a taste of how insane .5 to 1 GT would be. Since you're just handwaving things away without much substance, I have to conclude that you're roundabout conceding the issue.
-Mike
I'm not talking about the yield but the number of torps fired. 100,000 is nothing like a real average. It's like saying a ship's shields can withstand between 30~80 megatons and 20~70 teratons and claiming that the ~ between 40 and 70 is the average.
With a fleet of +100 ships, claiming that on the average, each one of them managed to fire about 100 torps is not s'rious. >:[
Even in Nemesis, when they have a lock, there are pauses.
You need to reconsider your directives.