Can someone tell me if the Miranda, Nebula and Akira classes have auto reload torpedo launchers, something similar to the guns found on the cruisers and destroyers of most of navies today?
JDW
JDW
Can someone tell me if the Miranda, Nebula and Akira classes have auto reload torpedo launchers, something similar to the guns found on the cruisers and destroyers of most of navies today?
JDW
Until "Enterprise" came along I would have said the question of "auto-reloading" was a silly question about any starship, but now don't we have a scene somewhere where Malcolm Reed picks up and places a torpedo in the tube with his bare hands.
I'd rather suspect it would be fully automated in TWoK, too - it's just that a training ship normally would use the torpedo room for purposes other than firing torpedoes, such as receptions for visiting Admirals, so there would be deck plates covering the tracks. After those were removed and the long-dormant system was primed, it would become fully automatic, rapid and efficient.
I assume that most 23th and 24th century ships always have fully automated torpedo systems and that the manual option is only there for redundancy for when power failures occur and the like which is rather often in the trek universe..![]()
'Course, they'd essentially be the same thing, as the trainees would obviously be taught to use the manual backups after or perhaps before they learned how to push the buttons of the automated system.
As for the Miranda arrangement, it doesn't seem particularly difficult to provide "conventional" crew access to the pod along that rollbar. It's about two meters thick, after all; one could install a "ship's ladder" that descends at a shallow angle, say, 20-30 degrees, in both directions so that the crew could run along (and of course trainees would always have to run along the upward slope!), or one could do a sliding tube or firepole that descended more steeply towards the pod. A closed-circuit transporter might be the most practical thing, of course, but would a military organization trust such a high-tech approach to what is essentially their manual backup?
Timo Saloniemi
Starfleet would have had to devise something comparable for the Oberth class already
'Course, they'd essentially be the same thing, as the trainees would obviously be taught to use the manual backups after or perhaps before they learned how to push the buttons of the automated system.
As for the Miranda arrangement, it doesn't seem particularly difficult to provide "conventional" crew access to the pod along that rollbar. It's about two meters thick, after all; one could install a "ship's ladder" that descends at a shallow angle, say, 20-30 degrees, in both directions so that the crew could run along (and of course trainees would always have to run along the upward slope!), or one could do a sliding tube or firepole that descended more steeply towards the pod. A closed-circuit transporter might be the most practical thing, of course, but would a military organization trust such a high-tech approach to what is essentially their manual backup?
Timo Saloniemi
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