Difference between revisions of "grav plating"

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Artificial gravity was produced by grav plating. When the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701]] lost power to its engines during [[First Contact]] with the [[Talosians]] in [[Prime Chronology: 2254|2254]], [[Spock]] noted that were it not for backup battery power, they would have lost gravity and [[life support]].<ref name="TOS00"/> After an encounter with the [[Galactic Barrier]] on [[Stardate]] [[Prime Chronology: 2266#SD1312|1312.4]], gravity aboard the ''Enterprise'' was reduced to 0.8[[gravity|g]].<ref name="TOS01"/>
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Artificial gravity was produced by grav plating. When the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701]] lost power to its engines during [[first contact]] with the [[Talosians]] in [[2254]], [[Spock]] noted that were it not for backup [[battery]] power, they would have lost gravity and [[life support]].<ref name="TOS02"/> After an encounter with the [[Galactic Barrier]] on [[Stardate]] [[2266#SD1312|1312.4]], gravity aboard the ''Enterprise'' was reduced to 0.8[[gravity|g]].<ref name="TOS03"/> Gravity could be set to different levels within different areas of a single ship, such as when the ''Enterprise'' computer was affected by the radiation of an unknown cloud and began playing practical jokes on the crew, it turned off the gravity in the [[computer]] core in an attempt to prevent Mr. [[Montgomery Scott|Scott]] from reaching its logic circuits and turning it off.<ref name="TAS20"/>
 
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Latest revision as of 11:24, 13 August 2023

grav plating
Grav plating (ENT95)

Grav plating (ENT95)
First Appearance TOS06 (8 Sep 1966)
Advertising
Prime Timeline
(The root of all realities)


Artificial gravity was produced by grav plating. When the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 lost power to its engines during first contact with the Talosians in 2254, Spock noted that were it not for backup battery power, they would have lost gravity and life support.[1] After an encounter with the Galactic Barrier on Stardate 1312.4, gravity aboard the Enterprise was reduced to 0.8g.[2] Gravity could be set to different levels within different areas of a single ship, such as when the Enterprise computer was affected by the radiation of an unknown cloud and began playing practical jokes on the crew, it turned off the gravity in the computer core in an attempt to prevent Mr. Scott from reaching its logic circuits and turning it off.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "Where No Man Has Gone Before". Star Trek, season 1, episode 3 (Production number 02). Directed by James Goldstone. Written by Samuel A. Peeples. Desilu Productions. 22 September 1966.
  2. Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Corbomite Maneuver". Star Trek, season 1, episode 10 (Production number 03). Directed by Joseph Sargent. Written by Jerry Sohl. Desilu Productions. 10 November 1966.
  3. Scheimer, Lou & Norm Prescott (Producers). "The Practical Joker". Star Trek: The Animated Series, season 2, episode 3 (Production number 20). Directed by Bill Reed. Written by Chuck Menville. Filmation Associates. 21 September 1974.