Topic: Voyager vs. Enterprise D  (Read 36302 times)

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Offline knightstorm

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #60 on: September 27, 2012, 12:10:44 am »
USS Constellation (The Doomsday Machine)-NCC-1017.  If I had time I could go through several other ships which appeared in Trek that don't fit in.  Originally, the hull number list was supposed to follow a chronological order, but that fell apart as production progressed.

Offline Lieutenant_Q

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #61 on: September 27, 2012, 12:31:42 am »
aye, that ship and the USS Republic NCC-1371.  Although it was always assumed that the Republic was a Constitution, rather than potentially being another class of ship.  No other ships appeared in the Original Original Series (not the remastered), that showed their hull numbers.  (Hood, Lexington, Excalibur, Potemkin, Exeter, and Defiant were other ships that were shown, but it was always either from too far away to see the registry, or from an angle that didn't show it, because all they did was re-show stock footage of the Enterprise)

The Constellation you could explain as the same reason they started doing 1701-A, 1701-B.  Something the original Constellation did warranted another ship being awarded the same hull number, to carry on the legacy.

But we've gotten off topic, a discussion on hull numbers doesn't bring anything more to the Intrepid (Voyager) vs Galaxy (Enterprise -D)  And I still stand by my original statement.  While the Galaxy would win the fight, I'd still rather be in command of an Intrepid.
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Offline Vipre

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #62 on: September 27, 2012, 01:33:13 am »
Meh, what does a little off topic hurt in a zombie thread...

"At that point they just assigned ships the next number in sequence, but to account for all the hull numbers, 38000 commissioned (and decommissioned) ships in just over 80 years, and 30000 more just seven years later, one does have to wonder just what they were assigning hull numbers to.  It's possible that they started assigning hull numbers to non-military ships (The Raven is a good example of that) its also possible that a number of ships were commissioned during the Cardassian War, the flare up resulting in the Tomed Incident, and the Borg scare, but never completed.  A number of hulls were commissioned by the US Navy during the tail end of WW2 that were never actually built."

Another possibility is they switched to a numbering system similar to one our school buses switched two back when I was in middle school where the first one or two numbers stood for something separate from the physical count. In the bus instance it stood for the year of purchase so new bus #12 in the fleet became I think 9212 or something. No guess on what you might be able to plug in for Starfleet though.

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #63 on: September 27, 2012, 11:02:33 am »
Does the Sovereign Class, EntE have bio-neural circuitry?

Adam

It's harder in movies to show the "ugly innards" of a ship like you can in a series.  Just not enough time.  I would assume that the answer is yes, but it was never shown or spoken of in the three movies.
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Offline knightstorm

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #64 on: September 27, 2012, 01:37:52 pm »
I still stand by my original statement.  While the Galaxy would win the fight, I'd still rather be in command of an Intrepid.

But that means you wouldn't have a petting zoo.

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #65 on: September 28, 2012, 02:10:19 pm »
Does the Sovereign Class, EntE have bio-neural circuitry?

Adam
I'd honestly be shocked if it didnt considering it was already put on starships before the EntE was even built, so most likely, yes..but to be honest there would be little (some but not a lot) of tactical advantage.. probably the biggest would be determining cloaked ship position based on hull impacts such as in Nemesis, but its main advantage is going to be in data analysis and calculations/'fuzzy' logic.
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Offline Czar Mohab

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #66 on: September 29, 2012, 12:43:08 am »
The root of the thread is who would win, Enterprise-D or Voyager. Since Star Trek is riddled with anomolies and temporal mumbo-jumbo, it is theoretically possible, therefore, that the future Ent-D seen in TNG:"All Good Things..." could be used to fight against the Warship Voyager as seen in VOY:"Living Witness". This would result in a confronation using:

Quote from: From Memory Alpha - Enterprise - X
In this alternate future, the Enterprise had undergone several significant modifications, including the addition of a third nacelle, a cloaking device, and a powerful phaser mounted underneath the saucer section. She single-handedly destroyed one Klingon battleship with 8 shots from this phaser. The first hit and two others went straight through both the enemy shields and hull, forcing another to retreat while rescuing the USS Pasteur crew, following Picard's attempt to find the anomaly.
This ship would include all available upgrades to a ship of ~2395, retain similar crew levels to the base Galaxy class (~1014) and still be, as stated earlier, a whale.

vs.

Quote from: From Memory Alpha - Warship Voyager
The starship featured:
■ 300 soldiers, including those assimilated from Delta Quadrant species
■ A triple-armored hull
■ 30 torpedo tubes
■ 25 phaser banks
■ Assault probes and fighter-shuttles
■ A complement of Borg warrior-drones
■ An Emergency Medical Android
Despite the large increase in crew and weapons, this vessel would still retain the one major advantage that the Intrepid class has over the Galaxy class - maneuverability.

I only see two outcomes from the battle between the two vessels above: a marginal victory as the Warship Voyager destroys the Enterprise after a long and bloody engagement which forces the abandonment of the Warship Voyager, or the Warship Voyager's on-board Borg assimilate the Enterprise, leading to a merger of both ships and the Warship Voaygerprise-D continues home, destroying random innocent civilizations at warp 13.975.

However, we need to look at this from a more practical Apples to Apples point of view. We can't assume the standard "random anomaly/time travel" line. We could play the "alternate reality" card - assume that Voyager was taken over by the Maquis and used the Caretaker to return home before the Enterprise was destroyed. However, we will not go with the standard Trek faire of imaginary posibilities. We will assume that Voyager and Enterprise-D meet in a wargames exercise similar to the Hathaway and Enterprise-D in TNG:"Peak Performance", following the launch of Voayger (Stardate 48038.5) and before her "loss" (Stardate 48315.6). Such an encounter would probably occur as part of the Enterprise-Ds Generations refits (occured in early 2371 - around the time of Voyager's launch and at the probable time of her shakedown cruise). This would be the most likely time of interaction between the two vessels in a "real" way.

My assumption here is that the encounter would be with Enterprise-D post-refit, a viable and logical test of both ships, systems and crews before they left Sol system for the cold embrace of deep space. However, there is little evidence of when the refit occured, just that it happend in 2371 - the same year that the Dominion was becoming a threat, thus, it could be seen as a partial Dominion War refit that was applied to the rest of the Galaxy class ships. Then again, it could have just been a planned upgrade. For the purposes of the V vs. E-D encounter, the refit won't be considered to have an impact in the overall results, and therefore can be considered to have not happened, and that the encounter is two ships that happen to be available shooting lasers at each other with their computers assessing the "damage".

Now, since we know that the encounter could only have occured before Stardate 48315.6, Voyager's crew does not have Harry Kim, Tom Paris or any Maquis, Borg, Talaxian or Ocompan  crew members, and her doctor isn't a hologram (Note: we can assume that the Ent-D may have recieved an EMH somewhere around this time, but since neither ship should need to use an EMH in the "battle", both EMHs can be considered as "not used" or "not installed" as appropriate). We also know that Wes Crusher would not be available in the "battle" since he went off to explore the galaxy. For the sake of crew vs. crew, we'd have generic helmsman vs. generic helmsman (stalemate), and (at least 7 years as a) Doctor vs. (unkown experience as a) Doctor. Voyager's doctor seemed like a total dork and was a bit cocky. He might have been good, but we have no real basis to judge his abilities. In the end, though, Crusher would get the win as Doctor - She's going to see, treat, and save more simulated injuries than Voyager's Doctor. Add to this the simple fact that at this point in her career, Crusher is near-legendary, if not in fact Legendary, while Voyager's Doctor is one step above generic helmsman. Heck, I'll even take Tom Paris as a medical technician over Voyager's original flesh and blood doctor any day.

We need to look into that legendary thing a bit - Its year 8 of Enterprise-D's life, most of her bridge crew is indeed near legendary, if not in fact Legendary. This would put the Enterprise-D's crew at a slight advantage to that of Voyager, at least in the positions of First Officer, Chief Engineer, Operations Officer, and Tactical/Security Officer. The first three of those are definately filled by generic officers on Voyager - so generic in fact that they are not mentioned again in her entire 7 year TV series. The Tactical/Security Officer position may be filled by Tuvok - I did not find a stardate for his transfer to the Val Jean, so we can assume that the entire "battle" would be based in part on the skills of Tuvok and Worf (at tactical). So, except for the captain and tactical officer, Enterprise-Ds crew would be the superior crew, hands down.

As to the Tactical Officers, Tuvok and Worf, we have an issue. Tuvok actually has the edge in experience here, however, Worf has the free-thinking-ness and outside-the-box abilities. Tuvok is cold, logical and precise. Worf is warrior-spirit driven, intuitive and precise. This might actually be the only close call between the two ships and crews. However, i'm going to lean towards Worf on this one, with Tuvok being only a point or two behind.

Now to the captains. Picard is Legendary (there is, after all, the Picard Maneuver - there is no Janeway Maneuver). Janeway is not - yet. Picard has seen combat on countless occasions with this ship and its crew and knows what it can and can't do. Janeway only knows a handful of her crew and Voyager is largely untested. Janeway does have an ace in her pocket though - she should know at least as much as Picard when it comes to Intrepid class star ships - a slight advantage, but an advantage none-the-less. All the comparisons here won't matter though - Picard vs. Janeway in 2371? Game, set, match to Picard (Jump to 2379 or so when its Captain Picard and Admiral Janeway - there's a reason she's an Admiral and he's a Captain... Its where they belong, where they can do what they are best at (Reference here is Kirk's demotion at the end of ST:IV and Kirk's "Don't let them promote you" speech in Generations)

If the comparison of crew to crew were to occur in some kind of parallel universe (such as the first encounter WAY at the top of this post) and would be something akin to 7 years later but not quite yet home Voyager vs. 2371 Enterprise-D, my choices would be:
 
Picard vs. Janeway - Picard
Riker vs. Chakotay - Chakotay
Data vs. Kim - Data
Worf vs. Tuvok - Tuvok (again, one of those close ones, Worf behind by only a little bit)
Crusher vs. EMH - Crusher
Troi vs. EMH - Troi should not be considered as Voyager really does not have a dedicated counselor (arguably, the EMH could perform that function; however, he is not dedicated to that role). Its not a fair comparison.
LaForge vs. Torres - LaForge
generic helmsman vs. Paris - Paris (unless its Paris vs. that one hot blonde helmswoman on the E-D... :smitten:)
Guinan vs. Neelix - Guinan. Neelix (to me, anyway) is to Star Trek as Jar Jar is to Star Wars and Lt. Keffer is to Babylon 5 - a character that didn't need to even exist. Guinan, however, is a bartender. Ten-forward is a bar. Bars need bartenders. 'Nuff said.
generic science officer vs. Seven of Nine - Seven

Ok, so lets look at the ships now, since I think I more or less covered the crew (where Enterprise-D's crew wins, more or less, hands down when compared to Voyager's crew; both in 2371).

Quote from: From Memory Alpha
Like many Federation starships of its time, Voyager was armed with phasers and photon torpedoes and protected by a deflector shield system. The vessels torpedo launchers were compatable with quantum torpedoes as well, with some modification. Additionally, Voyager carried spatial charges and tricobalt devices, the latter of which were not normally carried on Starfleet vessels at the time. (VOY: "Caretaker", "Dreadnought", "Relativity", "The Voyager Conspiracy")
Quote from: From Memory Alpha
The armaments of the Enterprise-D included twelve phaser arrays, two torpedo launchers, a supply of 250 photon torpedoes and hundreds of antimatter mines. The ship was protected by a high-capacity shield grid that could operate on multiple frequencies. When the ship was destroyed in 2371, the shield frequency was of 257.4 MHz. (TNG: "Conundrum", "Chain of Command, Part II", Star Trek Generations)
 
Although "Conundrum" establishes that the Enterprise had ten phaser banks, a visual inspection of the filming model clearly shows twelve arrays. The Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual also supports this higher figure. In addition, visual effects in "Darmok" and "The Best of Both Worlds" have depicted phaser fire coming from the forward torpedo launcher and the nacelle pylons.

In extreme cases, the saucer could separate and serve tactically as a second attack vessel utilizing the large phaser arrays located on its hull. The engineering section also had phaser banks but more often utilized its fore and aft torpedo tubes as its main weapon system. (TNG: "The Best of Both Worlds, Part II") This tactical method of attack utilizing ship separation was further developed for the Prometheus-class starships. (VOY: "Message in a Bottle")

Neither of those really help us here as Voyager's exact load out isn't mentioned. Neither is Enterprise-D's third torpedo launcher. So we have to look to other known "facts" about the two ships.

Based on her encounters with the Hathaway and birds-of-prey (not just in Generations, mind you), the Enterprise-D seems to have issues with smaller and faster ships (which just happens to be Voyager's ONLY real advantage (read below)) against Enterprise). Enterprise can handle them, just has issues. We have to assume that the torpedoes and phasers are of the same type as those on Voyager, or very very close to the same (e.g. one generation behind, type 6 mod As instead of type 7s, etc.). Enterprise's main advantage is her sweeping arcs with the phasers and her massive hull - she can't turn and hit the target, but does not need to; and as long as LaForge can keep the starboard power coupling and the phase inducers on line, the "whale" can take a beating. Enterprise's superior crew is going to be a huge factor.

Voyager, on the other hand, has speed and size on her side. It doesn't really happen until she's in the Delta Quadrant, but she routinly encounters and wins versus larger and slower vessels. Voyager suffers against smaller and faster vessels, just as Enterprise does, but that would not be an issue here, even if the Enterprise separated the saucer. Voyager will have issues against Enterprise's weapons when they connect, and Enterprise does hold the advantage in torpedoes - Enterprise carries 250 and can launch at least 10 from her fore and aft launchers at a time while Voyager is limited to around 40 and single launches per launcher; Voyager does, however, have 2 each fore and aft. Voyager's crew's inexperience will be a key factor (Voyager of 2378 just before "End Game" would actually have the superior stance vs. Enterprise-D of 2371, in crew, weapons and ability, but I digest) as obvious avenues of exploitation may not be taken due to that lack of experience.

The "battle" would go to Enterprise, but that does not mean its an easy win. To reduce the advantage Voyager's size gives her, Enterprise would most likely either focus fire on Voyager's engines or separate the saucer, or both. Voyager being a harder target to hit already, wouldn't take much focused damage except from lucky hits. 2378 Voyager would take advantage of the separate sections by destroying the impulse engines of the saucer (using most if not all of her torpedoes to do so) and drawing the star drive section out of weapons range of the saucer, effectively reducing Enterprise's weapons capacity. In 2371 however, Voyager would most likely focus fire on Enterprise's weapons arrays first, a rookie mistake.

In any event, the 2371 battle would end when Voyager got close enough to be caught and anchored in Enterprise's tractor and exposed to a couple of volleys of 10+ torpedoes. It will just take a little while for the two ships to get close enough. Don't get me wrong here, Enterprise would be severly damaged, but would be salvagable; while Voyager would be lost. Her size and speed were not exploited due to her crew's inexperience.

For the sake of arguement, the 2378 Voyager vs the 2371 Enterprise-D would fair much better, and in fact would not be caught and anchored to death. She would, however, suffer extreme damage and would probably be just as bad off as Enterprise, this battle would end in a stalemate; with a weapon- and shield-less Voyager running circles (on thrusters) around a weapon-, shield- and engine-less Enterprise section or two. The final salvo would be tricobalt device vs 10+ torpedoes with a simultaneous detonation, leaving both ships in this condition.

------

Now, someone somewhere in this posting mentioned Kirk. Kirk and the original Enterprise cannot even be compared to Janeway and Voyager. Why? Kirk >>> Janeway.

---Kirk would have destroyed the array AND got his crew home. So we have to pretend that he didn't.

---Kirk would, just for fun, return to the Delta Quadrant at warp 15 and eliminate the Kazon as a threat to the region. Then return home. Again, though, we have to assume he took a similar course as Janeway.

---Kirk would have integrated the Maquis into his crew, just as Janeway did. The difference here would be that even though Seska would still think it was Chakotay's baby, it would, in fact, be Kirk's (not Sulla's or Chakotay's). He wouldn't ever know, however, as he would have destroyed the Kazon ship she transported to (when she was revealed as the bad girl she was) just after she got there.

---Kirk would have stayed at least another day with Amelia Earheart on the planet with the 37s... For research...

---Kirk, Bones, Scotty and Spock would somehow jurry-rig a shuttle craft's dilithium crystals to fuse the space time continuum to cure the Phage.

---Kirk's Captain's Assistant would be Naomi Kirk, not Naomi Wildman. Ensign Wildman would have some explaining to do when she got home to her husband...

---Kirk would have destroyed the Borg by seducing the Borg Queen and infecting her with an STD from an extinct species (its harmless to humans, but instantly fatal to Borg. One of the 37s might have given it to him...) and still saved Seven of Nine... For research... Note that this may be why the Borg were never mentioned in TOS. Come to think of it, Kirk might have ended the Dominion War in a similar fashion ("Bones will give you the cure if you surrender, Female Changeling..."). And species 8472 for that matter - it would have had to wait until he found their earth-like biosphere, however...

---Because Kirk does value life, he would have ordered his red-shirt wearing crew to don blue or gold uniforms for the duration of the journey home, thus not losing a single crewmember.

---Kirk's "Year of Hell" would have lasted about an hour, he and his crew would have found the Krenim Time ship thingie and dealt with it, without destroying it, but still restoring the timeline

---Kirk would have had twice the temporal infractions as Janeway, but would not have had an angry 29th century time traveling Captain try to destroy the Enterprise over it.

---Kirk would have taken one for the galaxy and the Q baby would have been his. It may or may not have been with the female Q, however.

---Kirk would have hunted the Hirogen.

---Kirk would have bluffed his way through the Devore conduits and never woke the Vaadwuar up.

---Frendhip I was blamed for the destruction of the Uxali, by the Uxali. Kirk and crew would have slingshotted back in time to just before the probe reached the planet and recovered it.

Think that that is all I have.
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Offline Strat

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #67 on: September 29, 2012, 01:03:17 am »
You pic of the Wookie and the Princess reveals the feeling I had after finishing that extremely thorough post.

 :D

Offline knightstorm

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #68 on: September 29, 2012, 01:09:33 am »
For the sake of crew vs. crew, we'd have generic helmsman vs. generic helmsman (stalemate),

Actually, Voyager's helmsman before Paris was named.  Not that we know much about her other than the fact that she was a Betazoid, and wasn't impressed by Paris' bad pickup lines.
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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #69 on: September 29, 2012, 06:47:02 am »
 Guinan ,might have ben a bartender, at the time. But if you will remember, Q was afraid of her.
And warned Picard that "You don't know what a dangerous creature you have here".

 So there was a heck of allot they didn't get into in the show. In her regards.

Offline Vipre

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #70 on: September 29, 2012, 01:59:50 pm »
[Insert awesome but long quote here]

That post alone was worth bringing the thread back from death.
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Offline Nemesis

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #71 on: September 30, 2012, 03:17:55 pm »
Guinan ,might have ben a bartender, at the time. But if you will remember, Q was afraid of her.
And warned Picard that "You don't know what a dangerous creature you have here".

 So there was a heck of allot they didn't get into in the show. In her regards.

It is one of the things that bring the Borgs "power" into question.  Q fears (or at least is cautious of) Guinan and her people.  Guinans people were scattered by the Borg and still fear them.  The Q "don't annoy the Borg".  The Feds can't touch the Q but keeps defeating the Borg?  Only seems likely if the Borg want to be defeated due to other motivations. 
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Offline Lieutenant_Q

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #72 on: September 30, 2012, 08:54:34 pm »
You're right on that point Nem.  I'm pretty sure the Borg keep wanting to be defeated.  Otherwise they'd send more than one cube!  Send three... Five...  There is no such thing as Overkill, unless you need the resources spent elsewhere.
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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #73 on: October 01, 2012, 12:42:52 pm »
You're right on that point Nem.  I'm pretty sure the Borg keep wanting to be defeated.  Otherwise they'd send more than one cube!  Send three... Five...  There is no such thing as Overkill, unless you need the resources spent elsewhere.
The borg still have resource limits as much as they are strong.. and since they're enemies with everyone then really they'd need to setup a beachhead with an ample supply of organics to assimiliate with shipbuilding infrastructre to start making assimilated ships to expand beyond the beachhead, so they probably can only commit one or 2 cubes at most to the journey without hurting their military presense on the edges of borg space... of course this only works if they actually get there intact lol
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Offline knightstorm

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #74 on: October 01, 2012, 02:08:26 pm »
Also keep in mind that the defeat of the borg in the Best of Both Worlds was a fluke.  It was a completely unlikely scenario that the writers made happen.  First contact, the cube probably would have still been beaten, if the Enterprise hadn't shown up, although the casualties would have been much more severe.

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #75 on: October 01, 2012, 02:49:10 pm »
The whole Borg assimilate the entire species and destroy the civilization system is self defeating.  The Borg don't seem to create so to "improve" they need to assimilate humanoids.  Which is more effective over the long term the assimilate all system or assimilate a major city (say New York) with all its people and tech and move on to return when they have progressed and do it again and again? 
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Offline knightstorm

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #76 on: October 01, 2012, 04:31:39 pm »
except the borg view themselves as providing a service to the races they assimilate by bringing them closer to perfection.

Offline Czar Mohab

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #77 on: October 01, 2012, 10:55:01 pm »
Mention one bartender and look where this necrotic thread goes...

Guinan ,might have ben a bartender, at the time. But if you will remember, Q was afraid of her.
And warned Picard that "You don't know what a dangerous creature you have here".

 So there was a heck of allot they didn't get into in the show. In her regards.


It is one of the things that bring the Borgs "power" into question.  Q fears (or at least is cautious of) Guinan and her people.  Guinans people were scattered by the Borg and still fear them.  The Q "don't annoy the Borg".  The Feds can't touch the Q but keeps defeating the Borg?  Only seems likely if the Borg want to be defeated due to other motivations. 


But you do have a point. Why would a being that can teleport itself in time to see the Big Bang and survive it be affraid of the Borg and an El Aurian? It might be up there with "Why are elephants afraid of mice?" both in metaphor and in fact. Then again, it might not. You can skip the mess of words below and just jump to the conclusion at "----", below, if you like; but then you'll miss the good stuff.


^^optional video - its quite telling, though^^

Quote from: Q to Picard in Ten Forward, Q Who
You judge yourselves against the pitiful adversaries you've encountered so far: the Romulans, the Klingons. They're nothing compared to what's waiting.


Quote from: Q commenting during a senior staff briefing, Q Who
The Borg are the ultimate user. They're unlike any threat your Federation has ever faced. They're not interested in political conquest, wealth, or power as you know it. They're simply interested in your ship, its technology. They've identified it as something they can consume.


Quote from: Q to Picard, Q Who
You can't outrun them. You can't destroy them. If you damage them, the essence of what they are remains... they regenerate and keep coming. Eventually, you'll weaken. Your reserves will be gone. They are relentless.


Here, Q is telling us of how horrible the Borg are. Indeed, at this first encounter they are... horrible. Even in TNG:"Best of Both Worlds" the Borg are the most horrible thing to hit the Federation since the Klingons and Romulans in TOS; and they remain that way until the discovery of The Dominion in DS9.

So, then, we know, even at this first encounter, that the Borg are the (current) ultimate bad guy. We even find out that about a century ago Guinan and her people had a bad run in with them:

Quote from: Guinan to Picard, Q Who
My people encountered them a century ago. They destroyed our cities, scattered my people throughout the galaxy. They're called the Borg. Protect yourself, Captain, or they'll destroy you.


OK so the Borg have been everywhere we don't want them to be. Taking people and technology that they deem worthy. We find out much later that they only take what would add to their perfection (they didn't assimilate the Kazon, for example). However, there's still one more piece to the puzzle:

Quote from: Picard, Q and Guinan, Q Who
Q: [referring to Guinan] Picard, if you had half the sense you pretend to have, you would get her off your ship immediately. And if you'd like, I'd be more than pleased to expedite her departure.
 Capt. Picard: [to Guinan] You know him?
Guinan: We have had some dealings.
Q: Those dealings were two centuries ago. This creature is not what she appears to be. She's an Imp, and where she goes, trouble always follows.
 Capt. Picard: You're speaking of yourself, Q, not Guinan


Let's correlate what facts we need to here:
Guinan: "My people encountered them a century ago." - This point is pushed home in Generations when the Enterprise-B rescues, well, Guinan, from a refugee ship about a century before this point (OK, 3/4 of a century).
Q: "Those dealings were two centuries ago."

So, about 200 years before Star Fleet's first true "known" encounter (yeah - I am aware of NX-01's encounter, as well as the events in First Contact that lead to that encounter - for the latter, Star Fleet didn't exist in the past; and for the former, the word "Borg" is never mentioned) Q and Guinan had some dealings. 100ish years later Guinan's people are technologically advanced enough to warrent assimilation, and since technology doesn't grow on trees, we can assume that the El Aurians were a spacefaring species up to the point of their assimilation (another point supplimented by Guinan being in 19th century San Fransisco). So what dealings, then, did Q and Guinan have? My guess is a relationship similar to Q and Picard - tests to see how worthy they are, offers to individuals to join the Q, etc.

All in all, Guinan, and/or some others, told Q to go pound sand, infuriating Q after a century or so of relatively "peaceful" relations. Q then sent the Borg after them, as punishment and (for the Q, anyway) a good laugh.
-OR (the more likely of senarios)-
The El Aurians, being a race of listeners, learned something about the Q that they could use against them - a dirty little secret, if you will. The full extent of the El Aurian's power is never mentioned or explored, but perhaps being in large groups allows them to go toe to toe with the Q, which isn't too far fetched. There isn't anything to say how the Borg and El Aurians met, but however it happened, once the El Aurians were assimilated, the Borg also learned the dirty little secret about the Q; and learned of the Q.

Flash forward to "Q Who" a century later. Q warns Picard that Guinan is evil, and that the Borg are evil. Neither are to be trusted. Both will be his undoing. I will give Q the Borg bit - the Borg are the bad guys of the episode (and the series, off and on). It makes sense that he would test Picard with this enemy, something that the Enterprise-D can handle, if only for a little while. Q isn't, after all, provoking the Borg. The Borg don't even know that he is there.

And that is the key.

Guinan and her people know the anti-Q secret, something that only El Aurians can utilize, and only in sufficient numbers. The Borg know the secret and have the requisite numbers of El Aurians, but have no clue how to find the Q. Both the El Aurians and the Borg are, however, aware of Q-like behaviors (such as random ship teleports into hostile situations).

So the secret is out. Q (which one isn't important) made a mistake of sorts. Q let the only species that presented them some kind of harm get assimilated by a species that is more "bad guy" than the original secret holders. The Borg were probably just a play-thing to the Q about a centruy before "Q Who".

----In summary, Q and Guinan had dealings, ~200 years ago. These dealings lead to some kind of disagreement; and Guinan and her people know something about the Q. ~100 years ago the Borg assimilated Guinan's people and the secret. Therefore, Q (all of them) have a certain "respect" for the two of them.

Star Trek Voyager - 'Don't Provoke The Borg'

^^REQUIRED VIDEO^^

******

Also keep in mind that the defeat of the borg in the Best of Both Worlds was a fluke.  It was a completely unlikely scenario that the writers made happen.  First contact, the cube probably would have still been beaten, if the Enterprise hadn't shown up, although the casualties would have been much more severe.


If the cube destroyed over Earth was the same cube for the entire episode, then how do we have Borg in Voyager (Ex.: VOY:"Unimatrix Zero") that claim to have been assimilated at Wolf 359? Just a thought.


You're right on that point Nem.  I'm pretty sure the Borg keep wanting to be defeated.  Otherwise they'd send more than one cube!  Send three... Five...  There is no such thing as Overkill, unless you need the resources spent elsewhere.

The borg still have resource limits as much as they are strong.. and since they're enemies with everyone then really they'd need to setup a beachhead with an ample supply of organics to assimiliate with shipbuilding infrastructre to start making assimilated ships to expand beyond the beachhead, so they probably can only commit one or 2 cubes at most to the journey without hurting their military presense on the edges of borg space... of course this only works if they actually get there intact lol


If Voyager can poop itself out in the Sol System using a transwarp conduit, so can the Borg (see VOY:"Endgame"). If the first cube had been successful, it would be Star Fleet trying to uproot a superior invading force. This "outpost" is ~30k ly from support, but would only have to survive long enough for reinforcements to arrive from the Collective. However, since this cube failed, the Collective has no foothold; and Star Fleet has had time to adapt. One cube would no longer be enough ("First Contact") to take Earth, several (say, 10?) would be required. Due to the needs of the Collective, only one or two can be sent at a time until either the Collective's territory is closer or more ships are available. Size, in this case, matters; the Collective is both too big and too small to expand so far out.

BUT! Somehow, the Borg have assimilated some people at Wolf 359. Some assimilated just before hand (see almost any Voyager episode with Borg - there's like 30 of them, and about 10 have individuals that were assimilated around the time of BoBW). Either way, they got pooped 30-60k ly away to join the rest of the collective. Now, this could just be some kind of transwarp transporter, maybe a sphere tucked away inside the cube got pooped out before the cube reached Earth... I don't know. But what I do know is the Borg have the ability to move personnel 30k+ ly in the blink of an episode. So all the logical reasonings in the world can't fight this simple fact. Therefore, we must conclude with Nem that the Borg are not willing to win. Yet.

Think that that is all I have.
Cheers,
The Czar

P.S. I was wrong: I need to point out something on topic, and an edit of my previous post would be lost, methinks. Voyager and Enterprise (any of them, really) are hero ships. Hero ships generally don't get destroyed. Endgame Voyager could go toe to toe with Broken Bow NX-01 and neither would be destroyed. Damaged, disabled, crippled, crunched, smacked, slammed, smattered, or anything else, sure. Just not destroyed. Its the nature of hero ships. However, we need to discard the "hero" status of the vessels before we see them in "battle" with each other.
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Ravok

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #78 on: October 02, 2012, 09:17:59 am »
 Good post !! Lord I can't tell you guys how much im enjoying this thread. :)

 And how much I miss, these type of conversations. It reminds me of the "Old days".

Offline Starfox1701

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Re: Voyager vs. Enterprise D
« Reply #79 on: October 02, 2012, 12:23:53 pm »
I'm afraid I must invoke the Defiant principle in dealing with Hero ships and their plot armor as well as the Law of Enterprise which both state it is perfectly permissible to destroy a Hero ship so long as the crew escape and a suitable replacement is available that can be renamed for the fallen vessel. See ST III/ST IV, Generations/First Contact, and DS 9 The Changing Face of Evil/Dogs of War.