[ June 16, 2001: Message edited by: Stingray ]
We know with reasonable assurance that in this field we have observed a distinct increase in speed in the transport process since the beginning of TNG. This is due to technological advances, quite obviously. I only hope that the 'Enterprise' series is true to this precedent and utilizes a realistically slower and more cumbersome transport sequence than the ones used in TOS.
[ June 16, 2001: Message edited by: The_Evil_Lord ]
In fact, I don't know if they'll even bother to include Roddenberry's name in the credits. They probably will just for the sake of it, but if they're ditching Star Trek from the title...
So rather than investigate true Trek canon, and give some thought and respect to the Trek chronology in regards to technological compatibility with what has been established on the other Trek shows - most relevantly TOS, 'Enterprise' will employ transporters for the sole reason explained above - the ease and convenience of story telling.
Also, witness B5. They didn't have "tedious shuttle flights", they just sped things up a bit.
"Okay, we have to get in a shuttle and head down to the planet."
*one minute later*
"Okay, now that we've made it safely to the surface..."
B5 obviously had to use shuttles because they coudn't possibly employ transporter-type technology. They had to set themselves apart from Trek. To have used them would've been seen as a blatent rip off of Trek.
In TOS 'teleportation' was used to implement quick and precise movement to external locations. The theory regarding the inavailability of a shuttle set may indeed have been another factor.
In "Family Business", I think Sisko and Yates had a discussion about the quality of transporters aboard the Xhosa. It was told that transporters came in "marks", and Kasidy's old "mark V" was too primitive to handle the transportation of some delicate goods, so her crew had to haul the barrels by hand. Ben had thought Kasidy had the old model "mark VI" aboard, so presumably the modern TNG-style variant used by Sisko himself was mark VII or newer. (Note that they are apparently indeed discussing the age of the system, and not something like affordability, with Kasidy having bought the economy model of a modern device - I don't remember the dialogue word for word, but will check.)
Now, seven consecutive, gradually evolving marks or more (eight or more if we say the Voyager version came later) is just barely enough to account for all the transporter visual effects we have seen so far. Kirk's gold-shimmering TOS device (and the Jenolan's or the Ligonians' device) could be, say, mark III. Then there would be a blue-sparkling mark IV for ST:TMP, lasting for little over a decade; mark V with those scanning lines for the TOS movies; mark VI in between, if Paramount wants to revisit the E-C era or something; and finally mark VII for TNG, to be followed by mark VIII for Voyager and the TNG movies (these effects share such great commonality that I think they should be regarded as the same).
This leaves two marks for pre-TOS times, and gives an average of about 15 years of "mark lifetime". If we assume that the rapid discarding of the TMP version was due to an atypical failure of that design, then we can hike the lifetime closer to 20 years. This would place mark I somewhere in the 2230s-40s - which is exactly where fanfic has been placing it all the time!
One could say that marks were only assigned to human-cleared systems, and that cargo transporters and experimental, transporter-psychosis-inducing teleportation devices were in existence for some decades before that. This would still leave the device history somewhat short of the mid-22nd century mark...
One could of course also say that the marks do not proceed chronologically after all, nor span the whole history of the transporter technology. They could parallel the shuttlecraft "types" or "classes", neither of which has shown a satisfactory linear trend (class 4 for the TNG "van" in "The Outcast" yet class 2 for the VOY "sportscar" in "Drone" or "Extreme Risk", and no canon confirmation of types at all - and the type numbers are only at 9 now, even though shuttle design lifetime seems awfully short and dozens if not hundreds types of shuttles would be expected to have been created by TNG time).
Timo Saloniemi
quote:
Voyager's transporters might look the way they do thanks to whatever engineering team installed them, whereas the Enterprise E's slightly different effect comes from some tweaks LaForge has made.
My thoughts exactly. Transporter effect is generally the same in the Federation 24th century.. hell its only slightly diffrent in the 29th century.
The transport effect differs from species to species. Personally, I like the Borg and Cardasian versions.
http://www.trektoday.com/news/170601_01.shtml
The Enterprise will have a transporter (and imagine how pissed I am about that). The only thing I can do is observe the transport effect with a stop watch.
"The Cage:" Can't remember
TOS: Classic whine and gold shiimmer
TAS: Animated version of above
Movies 1-6: various effects, can't remember much except it seemed to be variations on lights, glows and shimmers
TNG/DS9: basically stayed the same.
Generations: can't remember
FC: definitely different
Insurrection: bit more TNG-like again
Voyager: the strange one, you know, two lights start in middle, move up and down, plus shimmer. . .
TWOK: You can talk through them, and that's about all I remember about them.
STIII: Like all things in that movie, it made a strange sound.
TMP: Blue variant of the above, with nifty "eddy currents" flowing in 3D all across the transportee's surface, instead of just sparkles.
ST2-ST6: Essentially the same effect in all of these, with "scan lines" similar to the later Voyager effect and with minimal sparkles. Only minor variations in color. Moving within the beam seems easy; people don't seem to maintain a rigid pose through the process in any of the cases.
TNG, DS9, Generations: Rapid white "waterfall" effect. Despite people often maintaining rigid poses, we get canon confirmation that one can move during transportation, and even look and feel around in the transporter beam's "phased realm".
Voyager: Scan lines added to waterfall, tinted towards blue. People always move within the beam.
First Contact: Simple waterfall? Rigid poses.
Insurrection: Very little transporting performed by Federation devices. How was Picard snatched to safety in the end? I seem to remember simple waterfall.
Timo Saloniemi
First Contact also had a network of stars that seemed to move downwards in a spiral pattern, I think. It definitely wasn't just the TNG waterfall.
The movie beams always had this disassociated blue or red glow that almost filled the transporter area. . .
Did we see any other races transporter beams?
I suspect that, when we see people moving in the beam, that's actually just the scanning process. From the moment of dematerialization to the moment of rematerialization, they can't really move (duh... all their bits aren't connected to each other...).
It is right you cant't move in the Beam. If you can, the Molecular Imaging Scanners coulnd't read you correct and the we have an nice Transporter accident
The Borg and the Romulan beam is Green
The Cardassian: is gold
Greetings Beamie
Although, I couldn't find anything in the TNG TM under transporters about 'resonator arrays' or anything concerning the look of the thing.