![]() ![]() Work that out, and warp 3 is only equal to 6.18c.Īlternatively if 964,973,896,800 kilometers is the total distance the Jovis could've covered, that makes warp 3 equal to 38.84c. That means the radius from the starting point would be 153,658,263,821.65 kilometers. ![]() Or if he was referring more to a search perimeter or mathamatical perimeter, so I'll do both calcs.Ġ.102 lightyears is equal to 964,973,896,800 kilometers. ![]() Now I don't know if Wesley may have meant radius rather than perimeter. In TNG's The Most Toys, Wesley noted that the Jovis had a maximum speed of warp 3, and that they'd had 23 hours, so they could "define a perimeter of 0.102 lightyears as his possible distance." In VOY's The 37's, Paris noted that warp 9.9 was equal to about 4 billion miles per second. Riker noted to Picard that even at warp 9 they wouldn't get there for another 20 minutes. 300 billion kilometers from the Enterprises position. In TNG's Bloodlines Data noted the Ferengi ship was holding position approx. I'll start with TNG+, but if anyone would like to provide calcs for the others, I'll include them in the OP in their own charts. Of course there are different warp scales in Trek, those being ENT, TOS and TNG+. I'll update the OP to reflect new calcs as they're posted. I propose we cite any and all examples we know of where calcs can be performed to get the real world velocity of different warp factors. I fugred it was about time we had a warp speed chart based on canon figures that we could refer to when we needed to. ![]()
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