Star Trek inaccuracies

Yeah, ships never attack from below or above the plane of the other ship.

Also, the ships always make sweeping turns. Why not spin on the yaw axis if someone is chasing you?

Anyway, your post reminded me of ‘Full stop!’ Full stop relative to what? There have been at least a few times when there’s nothing to be stopped relative to.

The luminiferous aether.

Only half-kidding. I think a case could be made that the Star Trek universe is non-Minkowski.

In All Good Things, FutureRiker went to Warp 11.

That’s known as the Tufnel maneuver.

The other thing that always gets me about these ship-to-ship encounters in deep space is that the ships are visible. Very bright spotlights are never mentioned, but all these ships must have them. Where is all that light coming from to get reflected off of them? Not distant stars that are light-years away, that’s for sure.

I always groan at the banking-in-space too. Has there ever been a SF movie or TV show that depicts this realistically?

Also “impulse power.” “Slow to half-impulse power!” says Picard. Context would seem to imply this results in a constant speed, but assuming their engines are producing a constant force, it would result in a constant acceleration. Maintaining a constant speed in space of course requires no force at all.

IIRC White Stars in Babylon 5. They were Earth space fighters. They moved by firing rockets, stopped by firing retro rockets, and pivoted in place by firing I-don’t-know-what-to-call-them-rockets. The CGI for Babylon 5 was cheap even at the time. But the physics were mostly solid.

In Shades of Gray (Star Trek: The Next Generation), the Enterprise sends an Away Team to the surface of a planet that is largely unexplored. Riker, wearing his regular uniform with the regular shoes he wears on the ship, is stung by some kind of vine while walking in a stream. He almost dies but, of course, Dr. Crusher saves the day.

The inaccuracy is the clothes the Away Team is wearing. It’s ridiculous to think that a team would descend to the planet’s surface without any protective clothing/boots whatsoever. I remember that episode, and I felt that way immediately the first time I saw it.

My main problem with episode- It’s a clip show!!

More a continuity error- Spoilers for TNG Movies

In Generations- Data gets an emotion chip. He cannot remove it or deactivate it.

In First Contact- He’s feeling very afraid so he deactivates it.

In Insurrection- ‘Could it be a problem with his emotion chip?’ ‘No, he left it on the ship.’

Considering it is a plot point in (at least) TOS Way To Eden that the standard uniforms are a lot tougher and protective than their mod styling would indicate, I agree.

And Shades of Gray sucks in any universe.

The Earth fighters were Star Furies. The White Stars were the Mimbari cruisers that helped protect Babylon 5 after it declared independence from Earth.

The Expanse also features realistic space travel/combat. When a ship shows up that moves in a way that appears to violate the laws of physics, everyone freaks out about it.

I admit my error and welcome your correction.

IIRC (and judging by recent posts I may not) Two groups had ships that moved by ‘unknown’ means. The Vorlons and another group I feel I can only name in a spoiler

The Shadows ships move by unknown means. It is eventually revealed they harness the power of imprisoned psychics to move the ship by telekinesis.

They did have unknown propulsion, but IIRC, still followed basic Newtonian physics when they moved - stuff like being able to flip around 180 degrees to fire on pursuing ships without changing their vector of movement.

This is exactly what I was going to say. This isn’t a matter of getting facts wrong. It’s merely a deviation from the style guide. I’m sure there are many people today who say “degrees Kelvin” or “Kelvins.” Who is to say that there won’t still be in centuries hence? Or maybe even the style standard or common usage would prefer what is now deprecated in the style manual?

Like Delenn’s “skindancing.”

That’s just odd. Why would they do that? It’s not like anyone writing for that show wouldn’t know.

The outside T.V. camera, obviously.

It’s more likely than the transporter ripping about ever molecule in your body and reassembling them (complete with your personality and memories)

Okay, they got Starships with those fancy computers and all that tech. Christopher Pike is confined to a beefed-up Rascal with life support, and the best they can come up with to communicate is a blinking fucking light??? We’ve got better than that in real life now!

I’ve seen fan speculation that either the last two numbers got flipped, or the original was supposed to have been in Fahrenheit, and they replaced it with Celsius (since TNG+ uses metric) but didn’t think to change the temperature itself. And that the science advisors didn’t notice.

I do know they were having trouble getting the thing under budget. And then there was the drama about how the episode had been modified, to the point that the original author went under a pseudonym and took a lesser position in the show.