Mr. Oragahn wrote:
First, we know that the Borg had already adapted to the UFP tech in and out to know how to defend themselves against photon torps and phasers. We know that under such conditions, a Cube easily swathes UFP ships like flies. Especially since the UFP fields many decade old ships, such as Miranda-class ones. Refit or not, they're not going to be as good as ships built from scratch to accomodate the newer breakthroughs in technology.
All right, the first part has little to no bearing on the situation, other than reinforcing that the Borg cube will be very tough to defeat and making the state of the heavily damaged outer hull and fluctuating power by that point in the fight rather impressive. It shows that at least Starfleet is making progress in learning how to fight the Borg and it shows that had Picard not been assimilated in BoBW, the 40 ship fleet amassed at Wolf 359 likely would have been far more effective without the Borg possessing his knowledge.
The issue of older, less capable starships involved is a legitimate one, however the battle seen
here has very few older ships. I think one or two Mirandas are visible, but no Excelsiors, Ambassadors, or Connies at all in this fight... unless they were all wiped out very early on.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:
Secondly, you're assuming 100 ships. Evidence of that figure would be required.
Thirdly, you assume all those ships arrived at the same time. Is it at least confirmed? It matters for two reasons:
If the UFP ships didn't arrive all at once, the Cube would have had a much easier job at blowing them up one by one.
Again, please refer to the video and what happens in it. At least 40 starships are there, a good number of which are known to have been destroyed or disabled before the E-E arrived and after. Simple numbers and some reasonable assumptions, such as the fact that we know the Federation by this point in time was assembling large fleets of 100-326 ships or more to deal with the Dominion threat as well as the skirmishing with the Klingons. Given the high casualties seen there, the fleet would have had to have started with a fairly large size as they lost nearly a dozen ships in a mere 2 minutes of fighting. Assuming only 2 ships lost every 2 minutes, and the battle lasted at least an hour, then you have 30 starships lost. If 2 hours, then 60.
Second, other than the E-E arriving late, there is nothing to indicate piece meal arrivial of ships. I would require proof of that.
Mr Oragahn wrote:The Cube would regenerate between each attack.
Fourthly, with all these factors concerned, you assume that each ship fired its entire stock of torpedoes.
More accurately, I'm actually averaging given that smaller ships likely have only between 40-100 torpedoes, while the larger ships, like a Sovereign, Akira, and Galaxy have loadouts around 250. Given the rates of fire we've discussed in other thread, 2 minutes is more than enough time for a ship to unload torpedoes with.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:
It's largely unlikely, if only for the fact that it's not how we see UFP ships behave, even when they're fighting a powerful enemy they fully know they must not let pass. You see how ships behave in FC: they don't even try to fire at the same spot, and they clearly don't spam the target with everything they have.
It's also terribly unlikely because of point 1: ships don't survive long enough to fire all they have.
As per the dialog in the video clip I provided, the Admiral's ship had been destroyed, it is obvious that the chain of command had started breaking down for the fleet until the E-E arrived and Picard took command of the situation and was able to coordinate a strike on the previously unknown vunerable spot. In counterpoint, many of the ships we do see have survived since the begining of the fight and probably have fired off everything they have, or nearly so. Again, see my point on averages.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:
You believe I established a false dilemma by ignoring phasers. This is not correct.[
I don't mention phasers because I view them as not any better than torps, especially when their NDF effect is totally nullified by Borg defenses.
The false dilemma is also established by the show and movies: it's very rare that both
weapons get fired at the same time.
It is a False Dilemma since you have in the past blatently ignored the fact that there is a considerable DET component to phaser beams. We already know that a tiny rifle routinely is capable of 1.05 MW, while a narrowest of margins variance in output of the second largest phaser array on a GCS is 60 GW. The fact that we see them firing both torpedoes and phasers at the Borg cube at the end of the battle in the clip provided shows that at the least they alternated quickly between the two.
Finally, you assume that a low end yield is about 44 megatons, but such is not the case at all. You can easily find one digit megaton range calcs for the torpedoes, and even from episodes such as Rise.
So what? Those are very extreme lower limits for torps for reasons we've already hashed out elsewhere that were based on fudging every possible disadvantage to weaken Trek. 44-100 megatons when all else is factored into the matter is a good average range. If you like, I can go over the numbers again, assuming 500-1,000 MT plus yield torpedoes, which are all possible given the upper range limits for torps as per a number of calcs. That would mean 50 or more teratons.
Mr. Oragahn wrote:
That's quite a lot of factors which can easily bring the entire shield strength many notches down.
But not enough to matter as demonstrated above.
-Mike