Not to forget the Picard Manoeuver. If a ship detect TWO ennemy ships, it will focus its shields on the first, far away one, leaving itself vulnerable to be destroyed by a constellation class starship..Captain Seafort wrote:That assumes that the shields are equally powerful in all directions - they aren't. From "Peak Performance" the Hathaway, despite being an 80-year-old piece of junk, was able to breach the Enterprise's aft shields when the Enterprise was distracted by Worf's sensor ghost, showing that either the ship angles its shields, or the aft shields are weak. Further evidence of weak aft shields is show in "Preemptive Strike" when Ro's Maquis ship was able to slip through a weak point between the nacelles.Teaos wrote:But then you have a power issue. Big ships have such huge power that their shields and beam weapons are powerful. Smaller ships wouldn't have the power to penitrate the shields of a Galaxy that well.
Wait a second. It always have been a totally illogic manoeuver/explanation..