What Happened to the Warp Speed Limit?

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  • Опубликовано: 27 мар 2025

Комментарии • 824

  • @chaff5
    @chaff5 Год назад +633

    They "solved" it the same way they solved gravity on ships... *hand wave with a line about a new technology*

    • @StormsparkPegasus
      @StormsparkPegasus Год назад +124

      "How does the new warp system work?" "It works very well!"

    • @gerogyzurkov2259
      @gerogyzurkov2259 Год назад +33

      Star Trek isn't the only one guilty of hand waves lol.

    • @bipolarminddroppings
      @bipolarminddroppings Год назад +35

      ​@@StormsparkPegasus and I will thank you for leaving me alone and not bothering me with silly questions, Wesley...

    • @LetsTakeWalk
      @LetsTakeWalk Год назад +26

      Wasn't Voyager the prime example of said technology?

    • @louistaplin4665
      @louistaplin4665 Год назад

      How cute an answer. Chaff5..... I'm sure you could come up with something a lot more intelligent than that.

  • @KevinTheID
    @KevinTheID Год назад +310

    I guess I interpreted that episode differently than was intended. I took it is as all ships were restricted to Warp 5 in that specific corridor rather than fleetwide anywhere in the galaxy.

    • @danielseelye6005
      @danielseelye6005 Год назад +50

      The first part of the order dealt with all places like the Corridor (not just the Corridor) that are more susceptible to the rifts opening up, making them essential travel only, the second half was for _all_ Federation ships, not Starfleet, but all Federation ships being restricted to Warp 5 everywhere, not only the Corridor.

    • @DanielRichards644
      @DanielRichards644 Год назад +35

      It was clearly meant to be galaxy wide due to the fact they constantly had to get permission to exceed the Warp Speed Limit in practically every episode after that one.

    • @KevinTheID
      @KevinTheID Год назад +25

      @@danielseelye6005 Rereading the order now I can see that. At the time though it seemed to be talking about this corridor in isolation.

    • @KevinTheID
      @KevinTheID Год назад +13

      ​@@DanielRichards644 At the time it seemed to be talking about this corridor in isolation rather than something galaxy-wide. Plus, in other episodes where it was mentioned, it more felt like to me a fuel or supply-saving measure rather than one connected to this episode.
      Like I said, I must have taken the episode differently than was intended.

    • @Skull-in-the-house
      @Skull-in-the-house Год назад +5

      @@KevinTheID I also thought as you did
      in fact I thought it was for that system all along and only questioned it after watching this
      Certifiably Ingame episode and reading some of the comments
      so you are not alone

  • @Gunnar001
    @Gunnar001 Год назад +210

    It was said that the warp speed limit could be ignored in emergency situations. It only seems like it was an abandoned idea because the few starships we follow in the shows are usually in these crisis/emergency situations during the episode and ignore the limit.
    This is far from normal though. The VAST amount of warp capable ships (civilian, merchant, commercial, Starfleet vessels on uneventful routine missions, etc.) are probably all staying under this new limit when traveling around the galaxy.
    You also have to take into account that several weeks typically go by between episodes (in the case of the TNG episode _Pen Pals,_ it was stated the Enterprise was on a mostly uneventful survey mission for over *6 weeks* before the episode ended and they moved on.) So, the Enterprise-D _is_ flying around under this speed limit more often than not while doing routine stuff like charting stars, delivering supplies, transporting diplomats.
    Usually only when something exciting and interesting happens is when we get an episode. That’s one of the few instances where you would see them really put the warp pedal to the metal.

    • @jblyon2
      @jblyon2 Год назад +20

      Yup, we weren't watching Star Trek: The Speed Limit Generation after all

    • @oldtimefarmboy617
      @oldtimefarmboy617 Год назад +17

      Considering that traveling at higher speeds always cost more in fuel and wear and tear, civilian, merchant, commercial would have a financial reason to travel at lower speeds all the time anyway.

    • @thobu6576
      @thobu6576 Год назад +5

      @@oldtimefarmboy617 is there anything in canon to suggest that fuel cost is ever a concern?

    • @VulpisFoxfire
      @VulpisFoxfire Год назад +4

      I was about to post something similar...with a few exceptions, the episodes we see are the crisis situations, not the mundane travel and such in between.

    • @BruderRaziel
      @BruderRaziel Год назад +9

      @@thobu6576 Not to my knowledge from the series, but I think the same logic applies once more: The vessels we follow in the shows would not need to concern themselves with the economic side, the captain decides the missions priority and that´s that. But if you ran an interstellar shipping firm I think efficiency would be a factor on your resume. Money and profit might be abolished, but costs still exist.

  • @MisterPuck
    @MisterPuck Год назад +123

    I imagine the Romulans sent a cloaked ship to the same system where the Federation discovered the problem, prepared to come to their own conclusions and call Starfleet on its bullshit. Then their research showed the same results, so instead they went home and quietly started designing a new ship class.

    • @enisra_bowman
      @enisra_bowman Год назад +30

      and maybe loadly proclaiming that the superior Romulan Tech don't have that Problem due to *technobabble* while behind the scenes they try to change things *hopefully*

    • @ElysiaWhitemoonOmega
      @ElysiaWhitemoonOmega Год назад +30

      i now imagien a cloaked romulan ship going warp 9.9999 circling earth, day in day out. slowly destroying subspace around earth

    • @rotkappchenlp7032
      @rotkappchenlp7032 Год назад +11

      @@ElysiaWhitemoonOmegathats actually a good point, why hasn't the fact that high warp speeds cause damadge been used as a weapon yet?

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Год назад +7

      @@rotkappchenlp7032 The likely answer is that it requires a warp core detonation in a destabilized zone, on top of warp travel being funneled to a narrow corridor. Cloaking specifically as well still leaves you there so have a ship spend too much time around a set part of space and it will get noticed due to its gravity.

    • @rotkappchenlp7032
      @rotkappchenlp7032 Год назад +2

      @@anvos658 true the case in the TNG episode was very specific and unlikly to happen again but it would be an interesting concept for a future episode to explore (technobabble is always an option to explain away the problems)

  • @jimorr820
    @jimorr820 Год назад +279

    It was a plot device that was not well thought through and proved to be inconvenient so they solved it and ignored it

    • @ANTIStraussian
      @ANTIStraussian Год назад +29

      One episode Troys mom is so annoying Picard tells conn to go to warp 8 to get her home faster.

    • @Tawnos_
      @Tawnos_ 11 месяцев назад +8

      Seemed Warp 5 = 55MPH speed limits? It seems to me the show used it as a metaphor for the oil crisis and improvements of how we move about Earth as much as through the galaxy :)

    • @huntjl88
      @huntjl88 11 месяцев назад

      ST TNG had multiple writers. That didn't allows follow what others had written in prior episodes. This is why most shows have continuity issues. One writer writes it into an episode. Then another has a plot for an episode that if they followed what the first said. Would destroy their episode. So they choose to ignore it. With this episode it appears all other writers hated it so they ignored it.

    • @jameswilson9348
      @jameswilson9348 11 месяцев назад +6

      Could be it was only really an issue in areas like that pass that had been heavily used for ages. Subspace likely is able to repair itself somewhat. So most areas weren't affected near as much as that one area.

    • @Tawnos_
      @Tawnos_ 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@jameswilson9348 I think that's a perfectly reasonable explanation of the situation given how it was the fact there was a ton of transit along that route which caused the tears to be problematic

  • @Sephiroth144
    @Sephiroth144 Год назад +280

    Honestly, if this subspace damage was the cause of The Burn, it would've been much better- like, the changes worked, but over time, they started to ignore it or figure it was something that didn't accumulate, until it hit a breaking point and then boom.

    • @TheHenschman
      @TheHenschman Год назад +61

      Well also could have gone with dwindling dilithium sources led to more omega particle research by multiple factions and bam cascading subspace destruction in so many areas that warp travel is essentially destroyed between systems and thus the need for other ftl systems

    • @BoisegangGaming
      @BoisegangGaming Год назад +60

      I do think that the source of the Burn in DISCO was very underwhelming and it being the natural end point of subspace travel and technology oversaturation would have been a great way to add a societal and moral message that Star Trek is suited to telling.

    • @Noahloveless1
      @Noahloveless1 Год назад

      They were too busy coming up with ways to push sjw ideology to be able to think up any coherent and actually good story.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Год назад +39

      @@TheHenschman True- but if it was the Subspace "Pollution", could've 1) tied into the Golden Age of Trek, 2) avoided the bum "literal crying baby" reason, and 3) worked with an ignoring a problem because its not an emergency now can still have consequences. (Especially since real world decades have passed, so it would work on two levels)

    • @grast5150
      @grast5150 Год назад +42

      no because STD is not star trek just cheap imitation

  • @Prime92
    @Prime92 Год назад +94

    I don't see it being a problem in Voyager. They had already stated that prolonged use of warp is the same area is what causes the problem. Voyager was only going one way, one time. So it was really a non issue.

    • @williamsovich8314
      @williamsovich8314 Год назад +31

      Plus even if voyager was an older ship without the warp upgrades. I would say it could be argued that the whole trip once trapped in the delta quadrant was an emergency situation and could therefore disregard any warp speed guidelines.

    • @kurtsnyder4752
      @kurtsnyder4752 Год назад +3

      Raised the nacelles to alter the geo.etry of the field.

    • @leexgx
      @leexgx Год назад +2

      voyager already mitigates the issue to the damage to subspace

    • @digidressdress2363
      @digidressdress2363 Год назад +4

      Voyager had to save resources, including warp power. Probably why they usually maintained warp 5

    • @gogereaver349
      @gogereaver349 Год назад +1

      also the issue was fixed.

  • @trekkie1701c
    @trekkie1701c Год назад +58

    Fun thing though and it's probably not intentional - but Warp 5 on the TNG scale is near the top cruising speed of the TOS Enterprise on the old scale.
    Which also really might mean this is a very new issue.
    Also implies the Excelsior's experimental drive is to blame given the timeline and the accepted rationale for the scale change.

    • @jawstrock2215
      @jawstrock2215 11 месяцев назад +2

      I like this idea.
      Bigger was not better.

    • @JRS3540
      @JRS3540 5 месяцев назад +2

      I was just about to post a question about how the Vulcans didn't notice the issue, having had warp for almost 2,000 years (minus the schism period) but your point is excellent. Good catch.

  • @James-rn7dx
    @James-rn7dx Год назад +13

    It's worth noting that the older ships seem to have gotten newer engines right before the Dominion war. Remember the Excelsior and Maranda class ships all of a sudden had engines that glowed all the time like the newer class's in Starfleet.

  • @vnep5743
    @vnep5743 Год назад +14

    This concept could have been used as a plot point later on. Say the Enterprise is searching for a ship whose warp trail is difficult to track due to going through a heavily traversed area. Then Geordi solves the problem by looking for a specific type of subspace damage after learning that it's using an obsolete warp drive.
    Or our heroes have escaped some situation using such a drive and have to play cat and mouse while trying to mitigate the signal they'd give off while traveling at the necessary speeds to get away from danger.

  • @SullenSecret
    @SullenSecret Год назад +17

    Until I saw this video, I'd assumed that it was just an eco-friendly episode that makes us think about being nice to Earth. Good video.

    • @icicle_ai
      @icicle_ai Год назад +6

      that's what it says on wiki (take with a grain of salt) The premise of the episode is loosely based on environmental concerns of the early 1990s, such as the measures taken to prevent Ozone layer depletion. Writers Naren Shankar and Brannon Braga discussed ideas for a Star Trek episode with an environmental watchdog group, and the result was "Force of Nature".

    • @BoopSnoot
      @BoopSnoot 11 месяцев назад

      In reality, that's all it was. At the time the left was promoting ideas that "the sky is falling" and wanted to reduce speed limits and push the idea of holes in the ozone dooming humanity, the usual "we're all going to die aahhhhh you have to give us power and all your money fast or the world will end!" But when that proved to be a political flop and nobody was buying it or the low speed limit idea, they abandoned that propaganda in our entertainment as well.

    • @oldylad
      @oldylad 6 месяцев назад +2

      It was, the stuff that came later was just the aftermath. Trek was episodic and during this period it was slowly shifting and writers began to revisit things from TNG and show their widespread effects in DS9, late TNG, and Voyager

  • @Noahloveless1
    @Noahloveless1 Год назад +35

    Voyager traveling at top speeds vs the Federation traveling in their own space makes sense. As the Federation make frequent trips all throughout their own space. The Voyager is traveling in a relatively straight line that they wouldn't ever plan to return to in their or several other lifetimes.

    • @Gunnar001
      @Gunnar001 Год назад +17

      It also was considered an emergency situation, so, they really weren’t breaking any rules by ignoring the limit.

    • @jawstrock2215
      @jawstrock2215 11 месяцев назад

      It's also the cumulative effect of multiple ships, on the same route.
      1 ship wouldn't do much damage overall

    • @marcofransowitz4773
      @marcofransowitz4773 11 месяцев назад +1

      Voyagers nacelles tilted to solve this

  • @jedstanaland2897
    @jedstanaland2897 Год назад +34

    In one of the books the federation started setting up warp dissipation systems that reduced all speeds within a certain area to below warp five. This wasn't perfect and only setup in extremely high trafficked areas. The next part is that they created a specific and special probe that they could launch to reinforce space along its path. There was also an improvement to warp drives after a certain point that steadily reinforce space/subspace as it travels. At one point they basically have been able to essentially go to a location that was at risk for some reason and simply leave the ship there for a few hours and repair all damage.

    • @MasterLittica
      @MasterLittica Год назад +2

      It is one of the brilliant things about the Federation a problem is found you then have milions if not billions of people looing into ways to mitigate, fix or any other mix of things about it

    • @jedstanaland2897
      @jedstanaland2897 Год назад +3

      @MasterLittica Yes and the federation is a good example of a strange mix of democracy, socialism, and capitalism. I understand that sounds strange but basically the way it works is they have what is described as a post scarcity society that has both communal ownership and individual ownership. Both the ability to vote but very little need to. The existence of an economy but no need to make purchases especially for the majority of people.
      Part of the interesting stuff I was seen in the series is that they have almost every need provided for and most luxury wants too but certain things are too expensive for your average person to simply be given because of resource requirements to produce them. Latinum or specialized and hard to replicate materials and structures self sealing stem bolts is a structural example.
      I also understand that they are primarily motivated by self improvement and they have a kind of social credit scoring system but the scoring system is so lenient and forgiving that you could essentially be a bump on a log and still have all of your need/wants met.

    • @scifirealism5943
      @scifirealism5943 11 месяцев назад

      Epic.

  • @dupersuper1938
    @dupersuper1938 Год назад +3

    It's a nice example of how a functional society reacts to learning of a looming environmental disaster: no special interests, no lack of political will, no conspiracy theories, no denial once it's proven...they just put their resources and best people on the problem and within a few years it's resolved.

  • @Hybris51129
    @Hybris51129 Год назад +17

    I will admit that the whole "damage to subspace" addition to the lore feels more like it hurt more than built anything of worth. It feels like now instead of trying to achieve more speed and go further into the unknown we are now being held back and worse still it's pointless because the damage is still being done and warp travel will one day be impossible.
    Its a constant dark cloud in a otherwise brighter take on scifi that takes more than a bit of joy out of the whole thing.

    • @kvn8907
      @kvn8907 Год назад +4

      I completely agree, and couldn't have said it better.

    • @JubeiKibagamiFez
      @JubeiKibagamiFez Год назад +8

      That whole episode was just an allegory for pollution and greenhouse gas emissions in real life. It was never meant to be a consistent plot point.

    • @QuesoCookies
      @QuesoCookies Год назад +5

      On the contrary, I think a whole galaxy of different societies acknowledging and changing their ways in the face of new scientific data despite any number of societal or political conflicts they might have between them is a very bright depiction of the future. It's unfortunate that the idea of damage to subspace was just supposed to be a throwaway episode concept for an environmental message and the very optimistic, Star Trek-y story of everyone respecting science and their responsibilities to exercise good stewardship of technology in order to prevent that damage had to be theory crafted by fans or hand waved away.

  • @ArtificialQT
    @ArtificialQT Год назад +36

    The Romulan Star Empire is untrustworthy and duplicitous, but its not stupid.
    Even if the official oublic stance of the state was to scoff at the idea of limiting warp travel speed, they would no doubt take note of the real damage it was doing to subspace and start working on solutions as well. If only to ensure they aren’t the only major power who suffers and falls behind due to subspace damage.

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 11 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly. They most likely rejected Star Fleet's data/proposal initially on principle, because they do not trust them, and because they were unwilling to just blindly agree to a decision imposed by someone else without their input, but they then did actually do their own research into the issue, came to the conclusion that it was actually a legitimate concern, and implemented their own methods to mitigate it based on that. Damaging their own subspace throughout the Romulan Empire is not something they would want to happen either.
      In fact, given how the Romulans do things, it is quite likely that once the possibility was brought to their attention, they were able to dedicate the resources to confirm the problem and then implement mitigations much more quickly and efficiently than Star Fleet was, and probably had finished their own changes even before the Warp 5 limit was fully implemented or enforced everywhere in the Federation (because they didn't have to deal with thousands of different groups bickering about all kinds of details and time-consuming democratic processes to get everyone to ultimately go along with it).

    • @eddieschwab864
      @eddieschwab864 11 месяцев назад

      The other thing to consider regarding the Romulan Empire is even though they would likely not comply, compliance may not even be necessary in their case based on the technology of their ships using a forced quantum singularity for FTL travel versus a warp drive it creates a superliminal fold instead of a Subspace field. Obviously the Klingons despite differences in nomenclature and terminology use the same warp drive technology as the Federation

  • @davidedens6353
    @davidedens6353 Год назад +21

    the term is "a lower subspace drag coefficient". Subspace is treated like a fluid in how it moves around he ship therefore you can express this the same way you would talk about water moving around the hull of a warship.

    • @-Keith-
      @-Keith- 11 месяцев назад +3

      Seems like you could also liken the spatial damage to shoreline damage experienced on lakes and rivers when ships sail through them too quickly. Stay under a certain speed and the shoreline is fine. Have a single boat speed through the water every once in a while, and there's also no discernible damage. But have a lot of boats all speeding through the water all the time, and the waves quickly devastate the shoreline.

    • @eddieschwab864
      @eddieschwab864 11 месяцев назад +1

      Buy shortening the overall profile of a ship it's Subspace profile, has the same effect as minimizing drag surfaces on an aircraft especially in the case of flying wing type aircraft where they remove all of the conventional surfaces as well as the fuselage itself and make it all just one big wing because when you eliminate the causes of drag you also eliminate the effects of drag.

  • @GSBarlev
    @GSBarlev Год назад +3

    This is somewhat true to life-remember the Ozone hole? Massive environmental problem, the causes were identified, the chemicals that contributed to it were phased out in a relatively short time as alternatives were brought to market, and we all got to keep our ACs and refrigerators.

  • @Ideo7Z
    @Ideo7Z Год назад +10

    This is why you need a good showrunner. It insures that whatever the writer's create, it doesn't have future implications of hindering the show's storylines.

  • @zeberto1986
    @zeberto1986 Год назад +40

    Essentially the warp 5 limit was a plot device to modernise our concept of futuristic space ship design and get rid of the 1960s / 80s style of Starfleet ships. With that job done its no longer needed.

    • @ranchoth
      @ranchoth Год назад +12

      Ah, my favorite Star Trek plot device...contrive a reason to kill off a fan favorite to make a Big Boom, and get a shiny new toy to play with.
      (Not bitter. About anything. At all. Really.)

    • @clintmatthews3500
      @clintmatthews3500 Год назад +13

      So it’s like “Transformers: The Movie” but less traumatic to young children.

    • @BoopSnoot
      @BoopSnoot 11 месяцев назад

      In Sci-Fi, most of these so called "plot devices" are subtext meant to subliminally influence the audience into a certain way of thinking to influence their political beliefs. At the time, the left was pushing the idea of reduced speed limits to reduce emissions, but when that political push was abandoned, so too was its representation in entertainment. Sadly, most entertainment tends to have a lot of propaganda built in.

    • @oldylad
      @oldylad 6 месяцев назад +1

      No? It was done as a commentary on pollution. The following changes to the new ships was an effect, it wasn’t the cause irl

  • @mb2000
    @mb2000 Год назад +24

    I like that you suggested that the Intrepid-class was retrofitted with the movable nacelles because of the warp limit/subspace damage. I always found it odd that in “Force of Nature”, Geordi mentions a USS Intrepid which, given this is only a year before Voyager’s launch, must be the Intrepid-class prototype. Therefore, suggestions that the Intrepid-class was build because of the events of “Force of Nature” is wrong, as the class ship already existed and was flying around, and no doubt Voyager and possibly Bellerophon would already have been under construction at the time.

    • @James-rn7dx
      @James-rn7dx Год назад +5

      I agree that the Intrepid Geordi was talking about must have been the prototype and it likely didn't have the movable engines when launched.

    • @zerrodefex
      @zerrodefex 11 месяцев назад +2

      The USS-Intrepid name was used all the way back in TOS so it might not have been referring to the Intrepid class that came later.

    • @mb2000
      @mb2000 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@zerrodefex True, but it’s not an issue that there have been multiple starships with that name, it’s that with the start of VOY only an in universe year later with an Intrepid-class ship (which must have been in development and the prototype already in use) it puts the whole “folding nacelles prevent damage” thing into question as it’s made to seem as though Starfleet came up with the solution before they knew about the problem!

  • @TommyRayzer
    @TommyRayzer Год назад +25

    That entire episode was so utterly ridiculous. Warp Drive is a fundamental technology and staple of the Star Trek universe and it would be extremely difficult to tell stories without it.
    So imagine green lighting an episode where Warp Drive was destroying the fabric of reality itself and eventually all Warp travel would be impossible. Did no one behind the scenes not think about the drastic implications that this would have on the entire franchise?

    • @WackoMcGoose
      @WackoMcGoose Год назад +4

      Agreed. Things like the Omega Molecule make sense as a threat to warp drive, considering it's 1) violently unstable on a scale that would make Rodney McKay blush if not done exactly right with planck-length precision, and more importantly 2) NOT something that everyone is already using on a daily basis. While it does have some logic behind it if you think in terms of analogies (the more you drive on a road with heavier and faster vehicles, the more damage you do, eventually making a road unusable until resurfacing... but how do you resurface _subspace???_ and mitigating damage by limiting speeds and vehicle weights is a logical extension of that analogy), it's still a franchise-breaking premise.

    • @sprinkle61
      @sprinkle61 11 месяцев назад +1

      Its eventual effects are centuries out in universe. It could be bad for future shows set vastly farther in the future, but it should have no real ramifications in the TNG universe at the time of this episode's release. Honestly, Star Trek has gotten so bad as a show that they will probably stop making any new Trek shows, once they get tired of losing money on it, so the long term effects will not matter. They could also just change to a different type of FTL travel entirely that does not have this issue, which Star Trek STD seemed to be working on with their ship-rotating teleportation drive, before they got sued for stealing their specific type of fast travel from another scifi work.

    • @natemyers1791
      @natemyers1791 11 месяцев назад

      It’s a metaphor for fossil fuels; they are crucial to society but damaging. etc

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 11 месяцев назад +4

      This was actually *part of the whole point* of the episode, though: What should you do when something that is so fundamental to your way of life, which you basically cannot exist without anymore, turns out to be actually causing harm?
      If it hadn't been such a fundamental element of the entire universe, and absolutely required for everything we know to be possible, then the episode would not have been able to actually bring forth the sorts of questions that people were trying to make everyone think about.
      I think there were some ways it probably could have been done better, but I really do not think it would have been possible to pose the same questions or consider the same issues in the same way if it hadn't been about warp travel, but something less fundamental instead.
      Sometimes, to tell a good story, you need to choose the more difficult path.

  • @Jamesbracken-ny2sg
    @Jamesbracken-ny2sg Месяц назад +2

    Warp infinity: agrees
    Spore drive: agrees
    Quantum slipstream: agrees
    Transwarp: agrees
    The traveler: agrees
    Bajoran wormhole: ignores

  • @chadnine3432
    @chadnine3432 Год назад +8

    The narrow corridor in "Force of Nature" would focus all the warp damage to one small region of subspace. "Open" space would spread the damage out and make it much less noticeable. (If they could detect it at all) So the problem went unnoticed until "Force of Nature". And over time it would make sense for Starfleet to address the issue and make ships that were less disruptive of subspace.

    • @oldered5663
      @oldered5663 Год назад

      Voyager didn't need to worry because it would only travel over an area only once..

  • @Hitman-zp5wi
    @Hitman-zp5wi Год назад +12

    if you re-watch the episode Captain Picard also states that Starfleet will begin to ways to modify the warp coils in the nacelles to prevent the damage from occurring one would assume that after that change was implemented and their ships no longer cause damage to Subspace they would then resume normal speeds

    • @oldylad
      @oldylad 6 месяцев назад

      Yeah, the episode was in TNG and it was still episodic, so everything had to be resolved by the end and it was. It wasn’t until later that all of this became relevant, the galaxy class wasn’t phased out for that reason, but it does help to explain why all of the old ships started to disappear

  • @ManuelRodriguez-dr2cn
    @ManuelRodriguez-dr2cn Год назад +53

    IDEA: start using the word cosmodinamic when discusing the narrow design of the ships...
    I mean, it sounds like something they would have used in the show

    • @battlesheep2552
      @battlesheep2552 Год назад +7

      Aetherdynamic? I mean if space is in fact made of stuff that needs to be protected from damage then why not?

    • @3Rayfire
      @3Rayfire Год назад +5

      I love it. Both actually Cosmodynamic and Aetherdynamic, though my vote is for Cosmo.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад +6

      I was thinking spatiodynamic, from spatial. Those are good suggestions too though.

    • @ManuelRodriguez-dr2cn
      @ManuelRodriguez-dr2cn Год назад +7

      Subspatial-dynamic?

    • @ethzero
      @ethzero Год назад +7

      Astrodynamics.
      "Astrodynamics research deals with the modelling, estimation and planning of spacecraft's orbits and attitude configurations."
      - University of Surrey, UK

  • @MikeAsano
    @MikeAsano Год назад +4

    I'm a big Star Trek fan but it does make me laugh how often this comes up:
    Star Trek writer/creator: makes ship design or plot point because it looks cool/rule of cool/story reason.
    Star Trek fans: Go full "UM actually..." when it doesn't fit 'lore' they concocted.
    Star Trek writer/creator replies: no it makes complete sense because they solved it due to "insert technobabble"
    Star Trek Fans: OMG that's amazing. Thank you.
    ...and the cycle repeats LOL

  • @vhhawk
    @vhhawk Год назад +3

    This question has been living in my head for the past decades. Thanks for the video. Trek show canon alone is too big for me to keep track of, much less the non-show canon, and the apocrypha on top of that.

  • @YbotPoweredGaming
    @YbotPoweredGaming Год назад +2

    My interpretation of the Warp 5 speed limit was that it's a federation territory-wide limit.
    I assumed in the case of Voyager, new warp technology aside, that if a federation vessel was outside of federation or allied territory, say trapped in the Delta Quadrant, the speed limit did not apply.

  • @BNuts
    @BNuts Год назад +7

    There was a _TNG_ episode where they spent time installing and testing a new warp core on the _Enterprise_ . I forget which episode, though. They had an appointment that Picard didn't really want to get to, so the drive not working and shorting out the ship's non-essential systems worked in his favour, with his regrets to the officer he was supposed to meet.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад +1

      That came afterwards. Then, in Parallels, one of the first timelines Worf shifts to (where Data has blue eyes) they’re using that modified warp core. So it must’ve worked fine in that timeline!

    • @mb2000
      @mb2000 Год назад +4

      I think that was the Data dream “cellular peptide cake with mint frosting” episode, “Phantasms”.

  • @voikus
    @voikus Год назад +18

    The only issue i had with this from the moment I watched the episode is that after several million years of space faring civilizations its strange that the galaxy isn't filled with potholes where ships can't travel much like how out of those so many civilizations none discovered the omega molecule and blew the galaxy apart

    • @augustday9483
      @augustday9483 11 месяцев назад +3

      I guess the damage repairs itself naturally over time.
      It could effect be a viable explanation for WHY the Star Trek universe has so many fallen civilizations that used to be huge but disappeared. They either ascend into energy beings or tear subspace apart and die out on isolated worlds.

    • @voikus
      @voikus 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@augustday9483 fair point

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 11 месяцев назад +3

      We have seen quite a few "subspace anomalies", "subspace distortions", etc, throughout all of the Star Trek series. Perhaps many of these are actually remnants of warp damage caused by previous civilizations, etc. It is possible that over time, a rupture can "heal itself", but various lingering effects may continue to exist in that region for much longer...
      It's also possible that many of the more advanced previous warp-capable civilizations came to realize these issues too, the same way that we eventually did, and found their own ways to mitigate it, the same as we did, so they never reached the point of doing enough damage to cause those "potholes" in the first place.
      (It seems strongly implied to me in the series that the damage to subspace may be a cumulative-but-not-permanent thing. That is, it can slowly heal over time, the problem is just when the damage accumulates faster than it can heal itself. Therefore, travelling at a slow enough speed, or potentially with some of the other technology changes, it might be possible to do so little damage that the overall state of things does not actually get any worse over time, and it can be done indefinitely with no long-term effects.)

  • @kingssman2
    @kingssman2 Год назад +28

    Something grim to acknowledge post Dominion war, "Surviving older Starfleet Ships" were decommissioned.
    I don't think too many old Excelsiors or Galaxy classes remained.

    • @gerogyzurkov2259
      @gerogyzurkov2259 Год назад +5

      Decommissioning the Galaxy seems stupid. It's not that old during DS9. Especially when the fact Picard just made a new Excelsior 2 based on older Excelsior, but bigger.

    • @TeamDoc312
      @TeamDoc312 Год назад +4

      I'm pretty sure the Miranda class was pretty wasted also.

    • @gerogyzurkov2259
      @gerogyzurkov2259 Год назад +2

      @@TeamDoc312 Nah if they're willing to use STO game ships. They will probably do a Miranda refit to feature on screen.

    • @gerogyzurkov2259
      @gerogyzurkov2259 Год назад +1

      They willing to use STO Ross class as a Galaxy class refit canon during S2 of Picard. I don't think they will fully decommission the Galaxy class yet.

    • @louistaplin4665
      @louistaplin4665 Год назад +3

      You can only upgrade a ship so far before you have to replace it.
      And Picard used about 5 or 6 Ships from star trek online that are now considered canon to replace certain classes in the fleet

  • @scottgardener
    @scottgardener Год назад +1

    This is actually a nice explanation why Voyager has folding nacelles; it was a late engineering fix

  • @aurorajones8481
    @aurorajones8481 Год назад +3

    7:17 The word you are looking for is "Warp field dynamics" use that.

  • @LordFoxxyFoxington
    @LordFoxxyFoxington Год назад +7

    I want them to undo the Warp 10 episode from Voyager and treat it like it never happened, just have them go past warp 9 and never talk about the weird frog thing.

  • @Culdcepter
    @Culdcepter Год назад +4

    Love your explanation, exceptionally clear and just makes the most sense about what's going on with the speed limit. Now if only people on Earth now with cars can figure out speed limits....

  • @uzetaab
    @uzetaab 11 месяцев назад

    I had always wondered about the speed limit so thanks for putting this together!
    One thought I had about the speed limit being a big plot hole for future episodes is that you are forgetting how rare it was for tv shows to have continuous storylines back then. It was far more normal for everything to be back to normal in the next episode, no matter what had happened.

  • @RubenKelevra
    @RubenKelevra Год назад +1

    I mean, for Voyager it made sense to completely ignore the topic. What amount of damage does a single ship travelling once through the space, if only continues travel shows damages after centuries and centuries? Right, next to nothing. Apart from that - this whole situation *was* an emergency, so it's in line with TNG lore.
    Also, it makes sense, to ignore those restrictions in wartime.

  • @brickbunny9686
    @brickbunny9686 Год назад +8

    The Vulcan's may have been using warp for centuries ahead of most everyone else, however, they are so logical and mathematical to the point of using the more efficient Ring, temperamental it may be, could have also avoided the damage to subspace unintentionally.

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 11 месяцев назад +1

      This makes a lot of sense to me. It seems quite likely that part of the "elegance" that the Vulcans prized about their ring design was that it actually moved more efficiently through subspace, which would imply producing less drag, and therefore less disruption. It may be that they completely unintentionally avoided the whole issue, without even necessarily realizing it at the time. It wasn't until the brutish humans and other races came along with their more crude designs, "smashing through" subspace by force, that it actually had the potential to cause real damage.
      I could even entirely believe that maybe at some point, long before humans came along, there was maybe a Vulcan scientist somewhere who wrote up a paper on theoretical effects of repeated high-magnitude warp field disruptions on the integrity of subspace, and it got published somewhere as an interesting idea, but everybody could see that it really didn't matter in practice because of the way their engines worked, so it was just considered an interesting theoretical curiosity, eventually forgotten about, and never really brought up ever again...
      Who knows, perhaps the only reason Rabal and Serova were able to figure all of this out, when nobody else did, was because one day they just happened across an obscure little Vulcan paper from centuries ago about a theoretical curiosity that everyone else had completely forgotten about, and made the connection. That is entirely the sort of thing that actually does happen in real scientific circles all the time...

  • @ReivecS
    @ReivecS Год назад

    Given that Trek is actually talking about our real world through allegory and not the literal future, learning that they were destroying their world, making some "rule" to address it, and then completely ignoring it seems pretty spot on.

  • @tpyntavyk5552
    @tpyntavyk5552 11 месяцев назад

    Personally I just love how it shows technology can overcome these environment issues. We can create tech that produces less gases and less waste, that recaptures carbon from the atmosphere, etc etc.

  • @liljenborg2517
    @liljenborg2517 Год назад +8

    I thought the same thing happened to the warp speed limit was the same thing that happened to the Shore Leave planet, Venus pills, Tribbles, Kironide, and the Bluegills. The episode made its point and we never heard from them again except in Beta Canon.
    I mean, seriously, after meeting Plato's stepchildren, the Federation knows about, and can synthesize, a chemical compound that can give any humanoid psychokinetic powers - and we NEVER hear about it again. I wonder what it would do to Betazoids?

    • @Plaprad
      @Plaprad Год назад +3

      I think you answered part of your own question there. Imagine the hell Picard would have gone through if Luxwanna (sp.) Troi had those powers on any of her visits.

    • @liljenborg2517
      @liljenborg2517 Год назад +3

      @@PlapradIf you haven't read it already, look up Peter David's Star Trek novel Q-in-law. She don't need no Kironide.

    • @lukerabon7925
      @lukerabon7925 Год назад +2

      To be fair, I think the Tribbles also got an explanation. I think Worf said the Klingons wiped them out

    • @LanceThumping
      @LanceThumping 11 месяцев назад

      @@lukerabon7925 And IIRC they were brought back during the time travel episode of DS9 where they went back to TOS time.

    • @delrunplays2903
      @delrunplays2903 11 месяцев назад

      @@LanceThumping I imagine the Klingons were pleased about that.

  • @notagooglesimp8722
    @notagooglesimp8722 3 месяца назад +1

    Probably my favorite thing in all my decade and change of star trek online is going to the Delta wormhole, and meeting Admiral Tuvok on the upgraded Voyager on the next research voyage.

  • @guy_autordie
    @guy_autordie 11 месяцев назад +1

    If I understand it correctly, because almost nobody pass through this corridor, the damage was self-repairing of sort. And with a open space the effect are less likely to happen. Also, it could be, for the vulcans, the limited warp speed at the time and open space configuration that makes them unaware of the problem

  • @dajona7860
    @dajona7860 Год назад +2

    I think there is an additional canon explanation for Voyager ignoring the speed limit. In "Equinox" they mention a Starfleet regulation allowing for extreme measures to be taken when the survival of a ship and crew are in jeopardy (it was the regulation the Equinox crew used to justify harvesting the inter-dimensional creatures as fuel). Being stranded alone on the far side of the galaxy, in the quadrant the Borg came from no less, is a pretty perilous situation.

  • @oldtimefarmboy617
    @oldtimefarmboy617 Год назад +2

    If the subspace damage was only cumulative in places where lots of ships traveled at warp in a corridor where lots of ships traveled, then the only places where the "speed limit" would need to be enforced would be in those corridors. Ships traveling where traffic can be spread out over a lot bigger area where the effects had time to disperse and not cause damage would not need to adhere to that speed limit.
    Then there is the effect of the surrounding radiation that caused ships to travel through that corridor in the first place that might have amplified the effect warp travel had on subspace that would not be present elsewhere.

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Год назад

      I also fall into this theory that some starfleet scientist likely proved at some point that the ecoscientist's theory only worked within limits lack the corridor and even then it took intentionally detonating a warp core to open a fissure. So thus yeah, sure make the warp drives and ship profiles better, but just as a safety precaution, and as a way to justify overhauling the fleet as starfleet realized they needed actual warships.

  • @DarkSorrow29
    @DarkSorrow29 11 месяцев назад

    When a lore video made by a single person is more interesting than a whole season of the recent Star Trek series... 😂
    Thanks for the video

  • @ARCAlpha12
    @ARCAlpha12 Год назад

    The one major outlier in the description of the fact that most large profile ships were retired was the introduction of the Ross-class, which we see in Picard Season 2, which is clearly the successor to the Galaxy in every way from design profile to size. Almost all Starfleet ships until that point had become narrower, smaller, or sleeker in design, which i am including the Duderstadt and Neo Constitution because they are smaller ships with a more derived streamlined profile to a certain extent, but the Ross stands out among them as being a giant step backwards almost in design profile, and it's a newer ship class. So the warp system and subspace fields would likely have to be some of the most powerful in the fleet because it's so massive in profile compared to anything else.

  • @johnsledge3942
    @johnsledge3942 Год назад +2

    Great video, I never noticed how the rest of TNG actually did kinda adhere to the limit.
    Lifting it for the Dominion War makes total sense, but it would have been cool to get a specific line about that in DS9.
    Edit: some other comments here are saying there is a line in DS9 about it, but I guess I just don’t remember it in particular…

    • @rakaydosdraj8405
      @rakaydosdraj8405 10 месяцев назад

      Watching early DS9, there's a LOT of missed opportunitys for continuity nods, even for events within their own show (the extra, temporory dax host in season 1 that's never mentioned again in any of the other Dax episodes, for instance)
      Referencing a specific episode of a different show, during the days of syndication, would probably have been unimaginable.

  • @guarand6329
    @guarand6329 Год назад +34

    Poorly chosen plot device.

    • @birdjericho
      @birdjericho 29 дней назад

      I worry that The Burn may become a more serious version of this, with its own weird retcons/adjustments/timey-wimey plot hole rationalizations if another series takes place near the same time period. Overall, a character-imposed speed limit isn't too big a change. But more serious changes happened with the concept of midichlorians in Star Wars, and atium in Brandon Sanderson's Cosmere; a writer or writing team has to be very careful with a single change or event that affects the entire "magic" system of a story all at once. Placing limits on a power that was once considered functionally unlimited--or vice verse--without a very good reason is the perfect way to paint yourself and your plot into an inescapable creative corner. :)

  • @RationalGamers
    @RationalGamers Год назад +1

    The Federation finds out about about a drastic environmental issue. Dedicates massive resources to overcoming it. Manages to overcome it within a decade even with a galactic war going on. I think there's a lesson for modern humanity here, just as Star Trek has always had.
    Also I do love how most of this stuff is apocrapha but the series gives us just enough to rationalise that it happened off screen and not having it feel like the community pulled the theories out of thin air.

    • @Shapes_Quality_Control
      @Shapes_Quality_Control Год назад +1

      Characters in a TV show never had to deal with the real world economics of the thing.

  • @WeyounLP
    @WeyounLP Год назад +52

    im like 90% sure DS9 mentioned the warp limit in at least one episode

    • @Aragorn7884
      @Aragorn7884 Год назад +2

      Sounds familiar. Which episode?

    • @WeyounLP
      @WeyounLP Год назад +2

      @@Aragorn7884 Trying to find it. I thought it was "The search part 1", but the transcript doesnt support that

    • @mb2000
      @mb2000 Год назад +9

      @@WeyounLP Could you be thinking of “If Wishes Were Horses”? They mention in that episode that elevated thoron emissions in the Denorios belt could have been an environmental byproduct of the increased traffic use of warp and impulse engines in the area since the discovery of the wormhole.
      Although that episode was before “Force of Nature”.

    • @WeyounLP
      @WeyounLP Год назад +3

      @@mb2000 I didn't know that! But no, my brain is thinking of a line specifically regarding the speed limit

    • @ValeCorp
      @ValeCorp Год назад +3

      ​@@WeyounLP in one of the episodes they did say they are going to have to ignore the limit to reach somewhere on time. Maybe it was the episode with the Starfleet officer that crash landed on a planet and was dying from the atmosphere I don't recall

  • @Anarchist86ed
    @Anarchist86ed Год назад +4

    Star Trek without warp isn't Star Trek. They figured that out pretty quickly.

  • @brigbrizz
    @brigbrizz 11 месяцев назад

    Great episode! I didn't realize this had bothered me for quite a while after watching that episode until I saw this on my YT recommendations. One other thing I didn't realize was the time span from that episode to post-Dominion war, warp 9.9+ was only 25 years!! And the potential ship redesigns came out in just weeks with respect to Star Trek universe's time!!

  • @jbomb1234
    @jbomb1234 Год назад +1

    It took them 10 years to fix the issue. I wish we were that efficient.

  • @useraccountforme
    @useraccountforme Год назад

    There was one mention in Voyager. They encountered a species that limited how fast vessels flew through their space because they claimed that it damaged subspace. Janeway was confused by the claim, suggesting that starfleet found out about the damage after Voyager was lost in the Badlands.

  • @shaft5theng
    @shaft5theng Год назад +2

    The subspace damage was averted with the technology of Variable Nacelles. Voyager was the prototype.

  • @delrunplays2903
    @delrunplays2903 11 месяцев назад

    What's interesting is that, iirc, Dominion ships were generally slower at warp speed than most other civilizations (around warp 4 or 5 as I recall). This would make sense as the Founders thought in centuries rather than years, and would likely have been aware of the potential damage to subspace.

  • @bhig3
    @bhig3 11 месяцев назад +1

    I was hoping that this was going to be the cause of the 29th century burn event in discovery. Instead of all dilithium going way, space itself was broken by constant Warp travel.
    Oh well

  • @jeremiahrex
    @jeremiahrex Год назад +2

    The timeline you gave here would have been a great way to address the issue because it would parallel what’s happening in our world. There’s a big problem with fundamental transportation technology (burning fuels) and we need to move to something else (electrification). Trek could have shown that subspace damage wasn’t an end to transportation, but merely a problem that was researched and engineered out, just as the timeline shown did.

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Год назад

      Electrification just hides the problem by shifting it on to power plants, and all the heavy toxic metals in advanced batteries, though yeah the fossil fuels parallel was clearly what they wanted to go for.

  • @apophis40123
    @apophis40123 Год назад +1

    The dominion war variance of the Galaxy class did have additional parts on their nasals. It's possible that included in those were subspace modulators or boosters.

  • @MegaBanane9
    @MegaBanane9 Год назад +2

    ✋ Dominion War
    👉 Explosive Decommissioning

  • @Alexander-wx2ie
    @Alexander-wx2ie Год назад +24

    Let's be honest, even if the speed limit, Jeanway would have said: F* it, I have a lot of dubious acts to commit and I will not get over it until S5 Ep1 Night.
    And if you don't believe me, remember "silver blood" Jeanway.

    • @jackieanderson9408
      @jackieanderson9408 Год назад +9

      Remember TUVIX. 😢

    • @drksideofthewal
      @drksideofthewal Год назад +1

      I mean, people rag on Janeway for being such a stickler for protocol. Can't have it both ways.

    • @louistaplin4665
      @louistaplin4665 Год назад +2

      It's called life you absolutely can have it both ways.

    • @BoisegangGaming
      @BoisegangGaming Год назад +9

      Janeway be like "I have not committed enough war crimes yet, you can't stop me!"

    • @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
      @UCannotDefeatMyShmeat Год назад +1

      @@BoisegangGamingcaptain wipeout

  • @GrinningCoyote
    @GrinningCoyote Месяц назад

    I seem to recall that it came up in one of the TNG novels. A request was sent for clearance to exceed the speed limit but Starfleet delayed so long that the authorization was granted after they arrived. Riker jokingly asked Data to plot of Warp 9 planetary orbit.

  • @white-dragon4424
    @white-dragon4424 Год назад +1

    My guess by the more streamlined design of Klingon ships, they were less troubled by these problems?

  • @Lord_zeel
    @Lord_zeel 11 месяцев назад

    To be fair, even if the Voyager didn't have technology that solved the issue, the situation they were in clearly called for suspending that particular rule. Especially a single small ship making a single long track across the galaxy wasn't going to do a measurable amount of damage on its own, and traveling at significantly higher speeds was going to shave decades off of their journey. I don't think we know the specifics of what constitutes an emergency situation, but it seems unrealistic for the situation Voyager was in not to count.

  • @clintmatthews3500
    @clintmatthews3500 Год назад +2

    It’s funny because in TOS they regularly traveled at low warp speeds for unstated reasons. “Ahead Warp Factor 1” was the usual order. Did Starfleet just start getting impatient and unconcerned with efficiency or did they think that traveling faster was safe and efficient?

    • @jimskywaker4345
      @jimskywaker4345 Год назад +1

      I think earlier in TNG they did this too, but realized that's way too slow cause warp 1 is light speed.

    • @foogod4237
      @foogod4237 11 месяцев назад

      I believe it was stated in various sources (tech manuals, etc), that the reason why they didn't just use full warp to go everywhere in TOS was because they were actually constrained by how much energy it actually took to do the higher warp speeds. High warp speeds could not be maintained indefinitely, and put substantially more strain on the ship's systems, so they were only used when necessary.
      By the time TNG came along, there had been substantial advancements in the technology, so they could expend far more energy for far longer, thus sustained warp at higher speeds was not as much of a problem (but they still didn't push the engines at full capacity all the time, either).
      (Also note that the warp scale changed between TOS and TNG, so "warp 5" in TOS is not the same speed as "warp 5" in TNG.)

  • @garypalmer997
    @garypalmer997 Год назад +2

    I'm surprised you didn't mention the slip strem system Voyager brings back. And how using that information helped starfleet fix and even fill in the blanks they had in warp theory, thus no longer needing the warp speed limit.

  • @CaptainRC1
    @CaptainRC1 Год назад +5

    I'm not so sure that the bulkier vessels were retired so much. After all, in Picard's second season, we see the Ross-class (which essentially looks like the love child of a Galaxy-class and a Sovereign) in active service in 2401. So it's quite possible that they solved the problem for the Galaxy-class as well.

    • @BeniBela
      @BeniBela 11 месяцев назад

      Picard's second season kind of forgot about the lore

  • @akula682
    @akula682 11 месяцев назад +1

    you’d think with the Galaxy Class ships they could just redesign the saucer section (since its detachable) to be more narrow. That would allow them to tweak the warp field to be more narrow as well to reduce the disturbance to subspace.

  • @damocles8417
    @damocles8417 Год назад +5

    It’s nice to think that everyone came together to solve a problem that threatened all. It’s a lesson for us today who still deny the damage we’re doing to our biosphere.

  • @DavidRYates-tk2tq
    @DavidRYates-tk2tq Год назад +1

    One wonders if limiting warp speeds to Warp 5 even reduces the damage that much, anyway. One would also think that higher warp speeds would mean a narrower subspace field anyway, just like how a Mach Cone has a narrower angle the higher speed a jet travels.

  • @invictus2578
    @invictus2578 Год назад +24

    Having them decommissioned the whole galaxy class line is really depressing. She was a beautiful ship line.

    • @gmradio2436
      @gmradio2436 Год назад +7

      That is surprising. I figured they just rotated the Galaxys to support or response duty. They might not be able to push the edges of unknown space any more, but a mobile starbase is still useful. I wonder if any ended up in private hands.

    • @invictus2578
      @invictus2578 Год назад +4

      @@gmradio2436 yeah but I doubt that..someone could glass a entire planet with the weapons of the galaxy class. So I don’t think Star fleet would put the line into private hands without gutting the weapons. But they could be on deep space missions… Looking on the bright side,the Enterprise D is still around so not a total loss..

    • @gmradio2436
      @gmradio2436 Год назад +4

      @@invictus2578Probably just the torpedo launcher. Phasers appear to be legal defense weapons.

    • @malkeus6487
      @malkeus6487 Год назад +3

      ​@@invictus2578no one really discusses it but any warp capable vessel could hit a planet hard enough to cause an extinction level event if not outright destroy the planet.

    • @richardarriaga6271
      @richardarriaga6271 Год назад

      ​@@malkeus6487It was supposed to be part of the Earth-Romulan War. The books talk about that, but we'll never know the story for sure.

  • @halfsourlizard9319
    @halfsourlizard9319 Год назад +3

    'But only in emergencies' ... but it's *always* an emergency of some sort or other.

  • @Acelister
    @Acelister Год назад +1

    Just thinking about how Janeway's speech in Caretaker might have changed "Even at maximum warp - which we're unable to do because of the known damage that high warp does to subspace - it would take 70 years to reach the Alpha Quadrant."

  • @DerBeppone
    @DerBeppone Год назад

    I'd argue, that older powers only made aware of the issue by 2370 is, because the katalyst of galactic warp travel basically was united Earth and consequently the rise of the united federation of planets.
    I imagine that warp traffic rose immensly during the rise of the federation and significant more traffic would mean significantly more fallout because of it.

  • @danieltilson4053
    @danieltilson4053 Год назад +2

    What I don't like, was the way they tried to "prove" the whole "warp damages subspace" thing by blowing up their ship. That's adding an additional variable, which completely invalidates the findings from the initial report. All that showed was that exploding ships can damage subspace.

    • @anvos658
      @anvos658 Год назад

      Yep I entirely agree here, let alone doing so sped up the damage to her planet.

  • @HCBailly
    @HCBailly Год назад

    To be fair, this is the same franchise that solved Earth's environmental problems with an alien found in space offscreen too, but at least they directly stated how.

  • @starhawke380
    @starhawke380 Год назад +1

    There was a re-tuning of the warp core technology in a later episode that fixed the problem they were causing with subspace. Data and Geordi were talking about it in Engineering one day. The scene was cut from the episode, but the new tech is still canon... No more warp 5 limitation needed.

  • @boredfangerrude8759
    @boredfangerrude8759 11 месяцев назад

    Something like subspace damage from FTL travel if you go too fast would make for a very interesting element for an MMO/MMORPG or a 4x space strategy game.

  • @TheUltimateUndead
    @TheUltimateUndead 3 месяца назад

    All older warp drives pre-TNG could be explained as "less than warp 5". In the original series we had instances where the Enterprise flew with warp 14. And their 5 year mission was far less area explored than later space travel called a 2 weeks journey. So older races like the vulcans couldn't travel faster as well, and therefore the effect on subspace would be minimal. For TNG the Warpspeed scala was reinvented and the physical limit to "below warp 10" was introduced.

  • @crazedvole
    @crazedvole Год назад

    I never could figure this out when they tried to make it a thing. I was of the impression that only certain areas of space were vulnerable to this type of damage. So, when ships are in these areas, they have to take it easy. But it does not make any sense beyond that because if this were a general problem, you would think the area around the Sol system, Vulcan, and other parts of the Federation's "deep core" would be unable to handle any warp travel at all after 300+ years and the literally millions of warp fields that have traveled that area in all that time. Right?

  • @TheHuntermj
    @TheHuntermj Год назад +1

    It makes no sense as all the star systems are moving through space at extremely high speeds.
    The Hecarus corridor would be constantly moving to a different part of subspace.

  • @johnsteiner3417
    @johnsteiner3417 Год назад +4

    You'd think that a franchise which has warp-capable civilizations for hundreds of thousands of years [or longer] wouldn't propose such a risk without showing it already plaguing the universe.

  • @cmilkau
    @cmilkau Год назад +3

    I thought the limit only applied to this corridor? Totally misremembered this detail about the episode apparently

  • @Paleorunner2
    @Paleorunner2 Год назад +9

    I thought it was a stupid idea. My thought is since the corridor was ruined ships started going around the area and people started to forget and after a year or two Starfleet quietly lifted the restriction and just kept going as it had before.

  • @graxxor
    @graxxor 11 месяцев назад +1

    “Warp 5 is a whole factor below…”
    Depends on how big a factor, surely?

  • @erichidalgo8153
    @erichidalgo8153 Месяц назад +1

    They changed the exponential scale just as it was changed after TMP Era.

  • @IronDino
    @IronDino 11 месяцев назад +1

    7:15 How about 'astrodynamic'? An 'aero'dynamic design means that something reduces or minimizes drag caused by air. While minimal, there is friction caused by dust and gas and other debris. In addition, 'astro'dynamic could indicate that the design reduces drag caused by dust, gas, or perhaps subspace itself.

    • @lasarith2
      @lasarith2 8 месяцев назад

      I think it fall under Astro propulsion then Astrodynamics .

  • @UGNAvalon
    @UGNAvalon Год назад

    Considering how the Galaxy-class was essentially a “cruise ship” in space, I’d imagine that many of the remaining ones would be used for less heavy-duty activities that still needed large storage space, such as transporting personnel & materiel to new colonies, parking a mini-starbase worth of scientists to an interesting anomaly, or maybe even going on leisurely tours across the Federation the way modern cruise liners do.
    Would explain why we no longer see them working on the frontlines of exploration. They may be retired, but they’re retiring with style. 😎

  • @snowts
    @snowts Год назад +8

    Joking: "Well you see Rick it was a new episode and the universe is non-persistent so last week doesn't matter to this week or next week for that matter."

  • @spikedpsycho2383
    @spikedpsycho2383 Год назад

    A ship can jump to warp anywhere, but without knowing the lay of the land ahead, it becomes an increasingly dicey proposition to avoid various objects and unstable packets of subspace.
    More case why "Warp Highways" exist as previously scanned and mapped pathways of extremely stable subspace, so a ship at "Warp 5" by default is actually going Warp 6.2 or something.
    At Warp 5, 0.6 lightyears per day.
    At Warp 6.2, Twice as fast.
    Earth to Bajor is 54 lightyears.... a 90 day journey at warp 5. But 19 days at warp 8 in a stable charted highway.
    Voyager' astrometrics was all about finding long distance subspace stability packets, one that would quicken their journey home.

  • @mofftarkin78
    @mofftarkin78 11 месяцев назад

    I seem to recall in the episode "All Good Things..." that Riker was now captaining his ship and orders it taken to warp 13. I take it they're solved the salamander problem with exceeding warp 10.

    • @CaptainM792
      @CaptainM792 8 месяцев назад +1

      Or perhaps the warp scale is a bit different in that alternate future

  • @nfineon
    @nfineon 11 месяцев назад +2

    Here's a much better Warp Speed System imo:
    Warp 1: 300,000 km/s (The Speed of Light)
    Warp 2: 600,000 km/s (2x the SoL)
    Warp 3: 1.2 mil km/s (4x ..)
    Warp 4: 2.4 mil km/s (8x ..)
    Warp 5: 4.8 mil km/s (16x ..)
    Warp 6: .. 32x
    Warp 7: .. 64x
    Warp 8: .. 128x
    Warp 9: .. 256x
    Warp 10: .. 512x
    Warp 20: .. 524,288 x
    Warp 30: .. 536,870,912 x
    Warp 40 .. 549,755,813,888 x
    Warp 50 .. 562,949,953,421,312 x The Speed of Light
    Here we are using simple exponential doubling of the warp factor value, which means you don't need to cram all possible speeds under warp factor 10 (e.g. warp 9.99965) and the warp factor itself wont get insanely high since we aren't using simple linear scaling. By the time you reach warp 50 in this system, you can traverse the entire Milky Way galaxy in approximately 8.403 seconds, quick maffs:
    Take 150,000,000 million LY (approx size of our galaxy from arm to arm)
    Divided by the value given for warp 50: 5.63 x 10 ^12 (already formatted in units that are multiples of light)
    = .000000266 Light Years per second (x 365)
    = .000097256 Light Days per second (x 24)
    = .002334133 Light Hours per second (x 60)
    = .140047973 Light Minutes second (x 60)
    = 8.403 Light Seconds per second (Journey Time)
    Warp 100 approaches instant teleportation with travel times across the galaxy measured in the pico second range (it would take longer for you to press the warp button than it would take to complete the trip).

    • @mikemurphy5898
      @mikemurphy5898 4 месяца назад

      I think you've misunderstood how the scale works. The warp scale is not a measure of linear travel but of the correlation between points and times in space...

  • @Skull-in-the-house
    @Skull-in-the-house Год назад +1

    Wasn't that "Limit" set for only that one system?
    I haven't seen that episode for a while now
    but that was my understanding of the limit when I did see it.

  • @FoxQueenIthil
    @FoxQueenIthil 11 месяцев назад

    Now you hesitate to say aerodynamic but that is actually way more important at these speeds than you might think. Most people believe that space is truly empty. That's not the case though. Even if you avoid the dust like particals there are atoms floating around in the void. At the speeds our current space ships go at this matter still affects our space ships. The solar wind can push things hard enough to throw them off target over long distances. Once you start approaching light speed however this becomes a real obstacle. Particles hit your vessel hard enough that it starts acting like an attom collider, creating deadly radiation and drag. Now warp speed compresses space instead of increasing speed, but this matter is still in the way, made more dense by the compression of space. Having a smaller profile then means you can use a smaller deflector to push that matter out of the way. Suddenly 'aerodynamics' matter even in space, once you get to high enough speeds.

  • @JeremyBuxman
    @JeremyBuxman Год назад +1

    I also head canon'ed that this really only affected Starfleet/"Military" ships as well. My assumption is a majority of "civilian" travel is actually 5 or lower.

  • @x64600
    @x64600 Год назад +1

    Hmm, maybe that was the reason for the third nacelle on Ryker's Galaxy refit Enterprise.

  • @TimberWolf99
    @TimberWolf99 Год назад +5

    To me, given the Intrepid class predates TNG S7 and Starfleet had definitely begun R&D on the First Contact ships after Wolf-359 (see: Defiant), I get the feeling that Starfleet *did* know and were already undertaking efforts to fix the issue, and either the Enterprise didn't know or it was made clear that those efforts were still *Top Secret* at the time. The Warp 5 Limit was then brought in to throw the other powers off with regard to Starfleet's development.
    I also get the feeling the Galaxys and other older designs had already been updated with improved drives that lessened the damage, but it was (again) top secret and probably buried in some manuals and forms that Geordi hadn't gotten around to picking through yet. Enterprise had certainly gone through at least two extensive refits by Season 7 and loads of smaller upgrades or retunings.
    Also factor in what KevinTheID said, where the effects of this subspace damage was more apparent in this one sector of space and basically nonexistent elsewhere, as well as the sheer arbitrariness of Warp 5 being the limit, and it's not surprising that writers just didn't bother with it and most fans don't like to even talk about it.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Год назад +3

      You know, we could've put a speed limit into that corridor and ones similiar, but NOOOOOO, someone just had to suicide their point all over the place.

    • @TimberWolf99
      @TimberWolf99 Год назад +1

      @@Sephiroth144if the intent was to represent the type of environmentalist who is incredibly loud while being incredibly wrong (eg: anti-nuclear) they definitely nailed it.

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Год назад

      @@TimberWolf99 Only if the environmentalist in this example goes and causes a nuclear plant to meltdown
      Though if you feel like it, we could get into whether nuclear power is the be all and end all or a stopgap while working on better renewable tech; also, if we're limiting it to current tech (i.e., fissile vs fusion)

    • @TimberWolf99
      @TimberWolf99 Год назад

      @@Sephiroth144I don't feel like getting into that, actually!

    • @Sephiroth144
      @Sephiroth144 Год назад

      @@TimberWolf99 Fair enough ;-)

  • @mjc4942
    @mjc4942 9 месяцев назад

    Most of the time it looked like Voyager was just cruising at impulse. And then they had to get home so they went as fast as possible. Also few were going in those areas so they wouldn't worry about it.