I'm a reasonably well educated human living on Earth. What's to stop me from replicating starship parts until I can make my own Starfleet?
from AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee to startrek@startrek.website on 18 Oct 2024 20:39
https://lemm.ee/post/45218186

Let’s say I decide I’ve had enough with this whole Federation business and that humanity would be better represented by a Starfleet that follows my particular ideology. Assuming I could get enough people for crew and support, why can’t I start my own Starfleet?

I could replicate ship parts until I have a couple vessels. Go to new worlds and present myself as the official first contact of humanity. I could fly to Vulcan or Bajor and tell them no actually my organization represents humanity.

What’s going to stop me?

#startrek

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Kaboom@reddthat.com on 18 Oct 2024 20:50 next collapse

Dilithium mainly

AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee on 18 Oct 2024 21:02 next collapse

That’s a good point. It can’t be replicated, right? Who controls the dilithium controls the universe, the dilithium must flow.

lordnikon@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 2024 21:33 collapse

DIlithium just regulates the reaction the fuel used is deuterium and anti-deuterium for the warp core and antimatter power reactors

Kintarian@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 2024 20:53 next collapse

I would assume you might have trouble since most of the planets are part of the federation and they have already communicated with them and so they would be wondering who the heck you are.

Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz on 18 Oct 2024 20:56 next collapse

Raw material, I would imagine. I don’t remember exactly how replicators work in the Star Trek universe, but they either rely on energy, a raw base material, or both. You can’t create something out of nothing so you would need a significant supply chain to produce your fleet.

If it were that easy, every rogue organization in the galaxy would have already done it before you.

AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee on 18 Oct 2024 21:01 next collapse

My understanding is that replicators restructure atoms. In which case an asteroid would be plenty of material for a ship, even if some of it is lost in the process.

Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz on 18 Oct 2024 21:05 collapse

OK cool, now if only you had a ship to go get the asteroid so you could make a ship. My last point still stands though, if it were really that easy…

AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee on 18 Oct 2024 21:07 collapse

Sisko built a ship that could travel between planets and it didn’t even have an engine…

[deleted] on 18 Oct 2024 21:59 next collapse

.

JWBananas@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 2024 22:47 collapse

He also launched it from a space station.

AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee on 18 Oct 2024 21:07 next collapse

Could I replicate charged batteries, then plug them in? Or would it take more energy to make the battery than you could get out of it? After all a battery is just a chemical reaction.

wise_pancake@lemmy.ca on 19 Oct 2024 02:26 next collapse

That would violate the laws of thermodynamics, you can’t create more energy in a closed system.

Flyberius@hexbear.net on 19 Oct 2024 07:02 collapse

Of course you could. The process will take more energy than replicating a drained battery too.

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 18 Oct 2024 21:35 collapse

Yep, raw material and a net energy loss.

The Federation might have both in abundance, but I highly doubt that much energy consumption is allowed.

SatyrSack@feddit.org on 19 Oct 2024 01:44 collapse

a net energy loss

Like… some energy just gets destroyed in the process? How does that work?

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 19 Oct 2024 02:24 next collapse

It gets converted into another form, as in the operation of any machine. I’m not arguing that it’s destroyed.

Darohan@lemmy.zip on 19 Oct 2024 03:19 collapse

The Laws of Thermodynamics say you will always lose some energy to heat when energy is used to affect a change. I have to imagine this would be particularly so when energy is converted to matter since that’s very involved, but I’m not a physicist so I can’t confirm that.

Come to think of it, this means that industrial replication plants and shipyards would likely be incredibly hot places, due to the inevitable loss to heat in replicating massive components.

Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de on 19 Oct 2024 19:21 collapse

i’m sure the federation has good heat pumps and such

mipadaitu@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 2024 21:14 next collapse

Depends on the writer, but they handwave a lot of those problems by the fact that replicators need a lot of energy to work (voyager explicitly said they didn’t have the spare power and used hydroponics and trade to supplement), and a lot of critical components couldn’t be replicated (dilithium, and antimatter containment parts. Also the isolinear computer chips were non-replicatible). I think you’d also struggle with any weapons systems, which might include shields.

Essentially you could build the hull and most of the mechanical parts, but not the critical systems.

reddig33@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 2024 21:31 next collapse

Aren’t there some elements that can’t be replicated? That’s why I thought we have dilithium mining and gold pressed latinum. There are probably components you’re not going to be able to synthesize/energize/whatever based on similar limitations.

th_in_gs@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Oct 2024 03:16 collapse

No elements can be replicated. Replicators rearrange existing atoms.

UpperBroccoli@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 19 Oct 2024 13:17 collapse

I’m reasonably sure this is not entirely correct. My understanding is that a replicator works similar to a transporter, in that it turns pure energy into matter according to a known pattern.

Kolanaki@yiffit.net on 18 Oct 2024 21:34 next collapse

  1. Your UBI allotment of energy usage is limited.

  2. What you’re even allowed to replicate is limited. Not just by, like, laws limiting what kinds of things you can replicate but also the fact that starships and other things require materials that can’t be replicated even if you had lawful permission.

  3. Look at the Maquis. They’re basically what you described, within the scope of what they actually can do as simple citizens. Even with the benefit of actual star fleet officers they didn’t fare too well.

Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de on 19 Oct 2024 19:23 collapse

from what i know it wouldn’t be that you have a strict energy allotment, more that people would see you using tons of energy and come knocking to gently ask what in the blazes you’re doing in there

trolololol@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 2024 21:37 next collapse

Just because it’s post scarcity and money is not pursued is not enough. You still need significant economic activity to put everything together, and big part of that is human labor.

About representing humanity that’s a politics side, does most of humanity recognize you? Piss off the federation president and get sent to found your own colony where you get to represent.

charonn0@startrek.website on 18 Oct 2024 21:58 next collapse

Your replicator is probably too small to replicate larger components, which would be a major inconvenience at best or a showstopper at worst. And industrial replicators are even harder to come by than starships.

Then there’s getting access to the replicator patterns for sensitive or dangerous components. Dilithium chambers, weapons, Mercassium composite for shield generators, etc. are classified by Starfleet.

Then there are substances that can’t be replicated, such as verterium cortenide for the warp coils. I don’t think it’s explicitly stated that VC can’t be replicated, but we know that Voyager had to find some to refit their warp coils, they couldn’t just replicate it. Also dilithium.

And finally, there’s antimatter. Building a starship won’t do you much good if you don’t have gas for the tank. Antimatter does not occur in large quantities in nature, and probably can’t be replicated (or at least not safely.) So you’d need some sort of industrial base to produce it, further complicating your plans.

wise_pancake@lemmy.ca on 19 Oct 2024 02:22 collapse

I suspect they couldn’t replicate dilithium because they’d be consuming dilithium, converting it to energy, then converting that energy back to dilithium.

The laws of thermodynamics state that this would be inefficient.

superb@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 19 Oct 2024 00:48 next collapse

Assuming you had access to the energy and raw materials, I believe you’d also be limited by the size and type of replicators you have access too. Not everything can be replicated, and I believe lower tier replicators have limits on what they can make.

I wonder if you’d be able to replicate a higher tier replicator with a low tier replicator?

InverseParallax@lemmy.world on 19 Oct 2024 10:28 collapse

Iirc replicators require exotic matter arrays, so no, they need to be constructed, at least anything more complex than a household replicator.

wise_pancake@lemmy.ca on 19 Oct 2024 02:20 next collapse

  1. Extreme amounts of energy needed for large items, but it seems like Earth has transporter quotas, so presumably they enforce energy budgets (based on DS9 Sisko using his transporter budget)
  2. Not all materials like latinum can be replicated
  3. Materials like dilithium are seemingly not viable to replicate, probably due to it being an incredibly wasteful process
  4. Many dilithium byproducts are unstable controlled substances, so at some point Starfleet would interfere to prevent the creation of trilithium or other unstable substances.
  5. I don’t know if you need antimatter, but I don’t think you could replicate it. You could replicate the machinery needed to produce it though.
  6. The Federation does have industrial replicators but they seem to be treated as controlled assets they rarely give out or provide access to. So they might meddle if you start building these.
StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website on 19 Oct 2024 02:52 next collapse

Most structural starship components would require large industrial replicators.

These seem to always be centrally located and powered.

What someone can do with a small home model would be quite different.

match@pawb.social on 19 Oct 2024 08:00 collapse

I’ll just replicate the parts to build an industrial replicator : forehead:

StillPaisleyCat@startrek.website on 19 Oct 2024 17:12 collapse

Controlled technology and not easily built from scratch even by Starfleet engineers.

The Relaunch novelverse expanded the concept and importance of industrial replicators. When Voyager returned to the Delta Quadrant, she led an small ‘Full Circle’ fleet that included a large engineering ship that did have industrial replicators large enough to reconstruct ships when severely damaged.

Lowere Decks and Prodigy have brought industrial replicators into onscreen canon.

Prodigy gave the Protostar prototype ship an industrial replicator large enough to construct shuttles. Lower Decks has shown the Cerritos and other ships tasked with delivering and bringing online very large industrial replicators on planets seeking Federation support.

Nomecks@lemmy.ca on 19 Oct 2024 03:29 next collapse

Sisko literally replicated a star ship.

halm@leminal.space on 19 Oct 2024 11:13 next collapse

Pfft, that archaic little sunsail jalopy? Geordi had the same hobby, with the added challenge of bottling his recreations.

Besides, I’m sure some Bajorans would have notes on the cultural appropriation aspect.

(big /s if it isn’t clear from context)

Nomecks@lemmy.ca on 19 Oct 2024 13:08 collapse

Pfft, that archaic little sunsail jalopy?

More starship than you’ve replicated noob! 😉

halm@leminal.space on 19 Oct 2024 14:14 collapse

😞 Too true!

ValueSubtracted@startrek.website on 19 Oct 2024 13:37 collapse

“Explorers” doesn’t contain a single reference to Sisko using a replicator during construction, but he does say, “I want to use the same types of tools the Bajorans had.” He asks O’Brien for a saw, and there are several scenes in which he’s seen welding pieces together.

Nomecks@lemmy.ca on 21 Oct 2024 01:01 collapse

Okay I admit it, he may have sourced the self-sealing stem bolts locally

data1701d@startrek.website on 19 Oct 2024 07:29 next collapse

Nothing. Nick Locarno basically did that, and it ended TREMENDOUSLY WELL. 😉

Granted it was only one ship; the rest were mutinies.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 19 Oct 2024 20:21 collapse

He just changed his name to Tom Paris, and everything was fine.

match@pawb.social on 19 Oct 2024 08:03 next collapse

ah yes, the SovCit Federation

mactan@lemmy.ml on 19 Oct 2024 08:35 next collapse

the protostar can replicate a whole shuttlecraft so sky is the limit (not really I guess)

the_crotch@sh.itjust.works on 19 Oct 2024 15:05 collapse

What’s stopping me from flying to Spain or India and telling them no actually my organization represents the United States?