My favorite ever begins with the line “we have been exemplary with our patience”. Picard was brilliant. That would make an excellent addition to this collection.
Picard: "Fire torpedoes!" Worf: fires one torpedo Which reminds me where is the scene from Generations? Riker ordered to Mr. Worf fire spread of photon torpedoes, but he fired only one. But the best scene is that from the Voyager - Phasers, full spread!
They can fire more than one torpedo in one "ball". They don't actually have to "spread" . Look at Generations. They fired a "full spread" and it was ONE "ball".
Mk95 torpedoe launcher can fire twelve torpedoes at ounce in group's of 2 to 6 they merge together to maximise damage on impact so you see less on-screen.
Mk80 can fire 10 at ounce in group's that merge so you see less on screen in generations the Enterprise D fired 10 torpedoes at the bird of prey they all merged to form 1 visible projectile maximumizing damage on impact.
@@poseidon5003Spread is the term for how many torpedoes can be fired at ounce for Voyager it's 12 per launcher but they will merge to do more damage on impact giving the enemy shields less time to dissipate the energy release and maximise damage on impact.
Some people are confused by Riker's Full Spread to end the Duras sisters was done with just one torpedo. This collection clearly shows that Full Spread is the same as Maximum Yield for a weapon with variable detonation, and NOT firing a bunch of torpedoes at once.
Full Spread most likely just means: "Torpedo is programmed to explode as soon as it hits a target". Unlike other launches, where they target the specific area and send a torpedo there. It's like "fire at will", where you just push out your bullets without targetting first, in the hope to hit. And if like in the Duras case only 1 torpedo is ready at that moment, the full spread only means 1 torpedo is launched
I've never been impressed with the special effects of Trek when it came to photon torpedoes. They're supposed to be so powerful yet most of the time it looks like they are fighting battles using roman candles.
The scripture verse is appreciated, but mixing Star Trek and faith in Christ doesn't often work (like mixing politics and religion). The "prime directive" for Christians isn't to "seek out new life and new civilizations." It's to seek the Lord.