You are basing your argument on what we see of the battle. We do not see every shot fired, so it does not disprove Worf's statement as we see the Scimitar firing from only a few points on the hull. This does not mean it does not have more weapons or those weapons are located close together.Rochey wrote:I'm in a hurry, so I can't respond to the two major posts, I'll just respond to this since it's the crux of the whole argument:
I have provided my proof already. I have also given several reasons as to why the number of disruptors Worf called out could have easily been wrong...and in this case the movie dialogue tells us that the Scimitar has 52 disrupors, so if someone wants to state otherwise they would have to show some type of proof.
Those backups make an already hideously expensive and complex vessel far more so. To shove on a whole tonne of weapons that will probably never see use is a massive waste of resources.If the cloak failed, the backups would be designed if not when
The Scimitar was designed to fight under cloak. Ergo, adding 47 more guns that cannot fire when cloaked is pointless. If the cloak is damaged beyond repair, the ship should retreat out of the combat zone (which its powerful shields would be more than able to allow it to do).
So with that in mind, we can come to one of two conclusion:
Worf was, for whichever reason you choose to pick, wrong when he called out the Scimitar's armament, and as observed the ship has far less weapons.
Or
Worf was right in his analysis, and the Romulans/Remans decided to waste a massive amount of money and resources and increase the mass, complexity and construction time of a ship that already had seriously high levels in all of those factors.
Personaly, I find option 1 to be the more plausable.
Seeing a disruptors come in various sizes and nothing is said about the size of each disruptor add more to the design may not have added enough mass to really affect it's maneuverability. So having extra, or redundant system would be a plus.