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  • Опубликовано: 29 ноя 2014
  • Lt. Tom Parris explains what instruments of a 1936 Ford Truck

Комментарии • 150

  • @MackerelCat
    @MackerelCat 2 года назад +64

    Some people give this episode a low rating but personally I think it’s very cute. They’re all very eager and interested and just have a good time exploring.

    • @teleportedbreadfor3days
      @teleportedbreadfor3days 2 года назад +3

      I agree this episode doesn’t deserve its crap, but generally, it’s always bugged me just a bit in any Star Trek how little they know about stuff from the 21st century and before. I think during this scene, they whipped out their phasers when the truck started. I don’t remember exactly but I know they jumped like cats. You’d think they’d at least know what a gun or even Morse Code was, let alone an SOS, at least by a little bit, enough that, if they were gonna look it up in the database, it would just be to double check more or less of the time. I was kinda glad Paris knew his stuff but it wasn’t as refreshing as I thought it would be.

    • @allanwidner9276
      @allanwidner9276 2 года назад +1

      I loved the episode. The writers didn't even try to ground any of it even in the pseudoscience and technobabble that makes Star Trek work, and several things in the episode were seriously stupid ideas - but it was still a nice, enjoyable - and in a series where a ship that size apparently held a fleet of shuttlecraft and virtually infinite torpedo supply - even though every couple episodes they were down to their last one - it was even believable.

    • @zethcader6478
      @zethcader6478 Год назад +1

      @@teleportedbreadfor3days I am sure there is a butt load of people in the star trek universe who are all about (what would be from their perspective) ancient technology, going as far to watch "classic" films and such. But for the vast majority of people in the federation, no one would have any idea of technology that old. Just like these days teens and adults who have attended higher education or hold down high paying jobs have no idea what a compact cassette, VHS tape, or a rotary phone is. It seems pretty plausible to me.

    • @teleportedbreadfor3days
      @teleportedbreadfor3days Год назад

      @@zethcader6478 I don’t think it’s implausible, but there’s a point where the ancient tech almost makes *them* look ‘primitive’, ironically, or maybe ignorant is more appropriate. They actually pulled their phasers on the truck’s exhaust blowing, I remember now, which is much more understandable, but shouldn’t a line be drawn somewhere when it comes to how little they should know of old Earth tech? Humans, especially. It’s more understandable imo if a certain number of them lack the knowledge in question. Maybe it’s just me

    • @zethcader6478
      @zethcader6478 Год назад

      ​@@teleportedbreadfor3days Well, at times the federation and its members can be quite pig headed, we've seen it happen before. Not unlikely that all the advancements they have made has made them quite complacent with everything they've got and see no use at all for more "primitive" technology. Its true for us today as it is probably true for future generations.

  • @tippycanoe99
    @tippycanoe99 2 года назад +27

    `The 37's' was a unique episode. A truck from the 20th century in space, Voyager landed on a planet and among the people abducted by the aliens... Amelia Earhart, which renewed interest as to what occurred that resulted in her disappearance.

  • @benrussell-gough1201
    @benrussell-gough1201 3 года назад +59

    There is so much bad science in season 1 of VOY but you can't deny that this was a brilliant hook for the episode: The impossibility of a pre-Warp Earth communications code in use on the other side of the galaxy. What the heck is this and how did it get all the way out here?

    • @Ragzzy-R
      @Ragzzy-R 2 года назад +4

      I haven't watched VOY yet, but other STs had similar ideas. There was a TOS episode where a planet evolved exactly like Earth and I mean not just Humans but the geography itself like they see fucking USA and Africa from orbit. and There was an episode in TNG where there was a medieval civilization made up of Vulkan like people.

    • @MichaelEricMenk
      @MichaelEricMenk 2 года назад +1

      @@Ragzzy-R In this episode it's a planet with humans descendants of victims of alien abduction from Earth..

  • @highlightning6693
    @highlightning6693 5 лет назад +94

    This one has bugged me since I saw it the first time. A 1936 Ford pickup floating in interstellar space for 300 some odd years? About -300F and 0 pressure environment and.... the fuel and tires are all just fine. LOL Oh, and it just cranks right up. Yeah, no. The writers didn't think that one through at all. Sorry to be so nitpicky. :)
    Edit: typo. Also, I feel I should mention that Voyager was one of my favorite Star Trek series.

    • @onlineamiga
      @onlineamiga 5 лет назад +12

      Couldnt agree more. The battery would have been wiped. My car battery died after leaving it just for a month lol

    • @thehantavirus
      @thehantavirus 5 лет назад +7

      they used alien technology to power the transmitter, im sure it was shown in the episode.

    • @drmayeda1930
      @drmayeda1930 5 лет назад

      @@thehantavirus
      Tom paris checked the truck and found no alien tech. At least nothing he could identify. but these aliens are very advanced the federation hasn't been able to figure it out

    • @spockmcoyissmart961
      @spockmcoyissmart961 3 года назад +13

      No doubt a Sears Die Hard battery! It could have given Voyager a jump if the warp core failed!

    • @lonknight3197
      @lonknight3197 3 года назад +3

      A question your all forgetting to ask is that they probably used the transporter to beam the truck into the cargo bay - the transporter beams may have restored the parts to working condition?

  • @zader2899
    @zader2899 2 года назад +6

    I love how harry says speed of light like oh that’s just so slow

  • @letsgoBrandon204
    @letsgoBrandon204 6 лет назад +64

    To quote Lt commander Data "This is highly improbable"
    They must have accidentally engaged the infinite improbability drive

    • @FabioPBarbieri
      @FabioPBarbieri 5 лет назад +1

      When did that ever stop the writers?

    • @TheRealDrWho
      @TheRealDrWho 3 года назад +2

      Nice HHGTTG quote too

    • @Starjumper2821
      @Starjumper2821 3 года назад +1

      @@TheRealDrWho I think it's actually a reference for the TNG engine room set, where part impulse engine schematic read "infinite improbability generation". Though I'm not sure it was ever shown. They did of course put it in because of Hitchhiker. There's apparently also a "remaining health insurance" monitor in sickbay. Source: "Die Technik der U.S.S. Enterprise"

    • @BradenENelson
      @BradenENelson 2 года назад

      Then where in gods name is the bowl of petunias?????

    • @marvintpandroid2213
      @marvintpandroid2213 2 года назад

      Ghastly

  • @akmi1931
    @akmi1931 Год назад +4

    Technically, any air/moisture in the truck would have been frozen as soon as it was jettisoned in not space. The rest of the vehicle probably would of been fairly preserved for the same reason. No oxygen means no rusting.
    The batteries in those old trunks weren’t designed like they are today. They were much more suited for long use (something battery makers today have removed because batteries that die faster mean they have to be replaced more often)
    And again, in the cold vacuum of space, there isn’t anything to discharge them.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue 6 месяцев назад

      funny an sos in the Delta quadrant that isn't strange or anything.🤣🤣🤣

    • @Zeakthecat
      @Zeakthecat 6 месяцев назад

      i mean the battery would still be shot, space radiation does that to a lot of things. that AM radio would not work anymore based on the same thing. the only way those 2 things would still work is if they were modified by the aliens that brought the 37s to that rogue planet.
      the same said for the starter in the gas powered engine and the fuel/fuel tank and tires.
      which i think thats what the writers were going for.

  • @LovingMyJourney
    @LovingMyJourney 2 года назад +6

    It's only a science fiction show. It's not like they have a panel of scientists analyzing every line of the script. Personally, I like the show, the characters, especially Cpt Janeway. They work well together to help others, defend themselves from hostile aliens, and eventually get home.

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke 6 лет назад +95

    I never did get how an AM radio signal could be received through a car radio within what is essentially a huge faraday cage (the ship's hulll) at a huge distance from the source.......

    • @thehantavirus
      @thehantavirus 6 лет назад +15

      its been explained, the radio was using alien technology to recieve the am signal, probably as a subspace signal.

    • @letsgoBrandon204
      @letsgoBrandon204 6 лет назад +4

      But 0:59

    • @safebox36
      @safebox36 6 лет назад +23

      There's also the possibility that it has been transmitting for years and since it only travels at the speed of light it would have been just enough time to receive the signal.
      I'm surprised they didn't know what SOS or Morse code was, not even taught it as part of military history or something at Starfleet Academy.

    • @randomrazr
      @randomrazr 5 лет назад +6

      did they take the truck back to earth?

    • @theOGofREDS
      @theOGofREDS 5 лет назад +3

      AM travels at the speed of light?

  • @living2ndchildhood347
    @living2ndchildhood347 2 года назад +4

    95% of all Chevy trucks are still on the road. The other 5% actually made it home!!
    This Ford truck is built Ford Tough. It is still working after 300 years drifting in space.

  • @Flielow
    @Flielow 2 года назад +6

    Even though the signal was something that they didn't monitor due to the fact that it only travels at the speed of light Voyager should have been able to detect it as soon as it was in the vicinity.

  • @AnonymOus-dp3jj
    @AnonymOus-dp3jj 2 года назад

    voyager on a boring summer day, excited over the radio.

  • @izzo28
    @izzo28 3 года назад +12

    I love when a Star Trek uses that deep science

  • @thegrimmretails3777
    @thegrimmretails3777 2 года назад +4

    Morse code: required course in Starfleet Academy 23rd century
    Also Morse Code: "Ancient" by 24th.

  • @paulmoffat9306
    @paulmoffat9306 5 лет назад +11

    Warp 6 to get to the origin? Whoever sent it may no longer care that a rescue is coming.

    • @JaredLS10
      @JaredLS10 3 года назад +3

      It was more to investigate an old earth code being sent out by an alien planet 60 thousand light years from earth.

    • @benrussell-gough1201
      @benrussell-gough1201 3 года назад +1

      @@JaredLS10 Yes. Y'know, a small possibility of an Iconian stargate or something. Kick over every rock where there's the chance of a short-cut when you're 70 years from home.

    • @hiuto2
      @hiuto2 2 года назад

      I thought warp 6 was 1 light year / day.

  • @KeyboardBuster
    @KeyboardBuster Год назад

    I wish my 30's AM radio could get a strong signal inside a big sealed metal garage like that

  • @morierty
    @morierty 2 года назад

    Always with the 215

  • @AECRADIO1
    @AECRADIO1 3 года назад +1

    S O S

  • @BarlytheDwarf
    @BarlytheDwarf 3 года назад +3

    0:43 What the hell was that line delivery? Torres sounds like a robot, that was the best take they got outta her??

  • @thesailormercury2
    @thesailormercury2 4 года назад +7

    they are in the 24 th century and the people there don't know about 20the century history

    • @Ser_Salty
      @Ser_Salty 3 года назад +1

      There was a third world war, you know.

    • @thesailormercury2
      @thesailormercury2 3 года назад

      @@Ser_Salty yes iit starts with a virus and end with a mushroom cloud ..

    • @lonknight3197
      @lonknight3197 3 года назад +1

      People today don't even know their own history - schools are teaching propaganda not real history, also on a less serious note - look up Ellen videos where they try to get teenagers of today to use an old rotary phone! So yes the Voyager crew may not know about 20 century earth history, especially the crewmen born and raised on a nonearth planet.

    • @jedison2441
      @jedison2441 3 года назад +1

      @@thesailormercury2 too close to reality currently LOL
      We have also lost a lot of ancient technology Rome Concrete, Damascus steel, Hell the Antikythera Mechanism was rudimentary computer from 2000 years ago.

    • @DLZ2000
      @DLZ2000 3 года назад +1

      @@thesailormercury2 what's your favorite 17th century technology that hasn't been used since then? How does it work?

  • @mokkymiah2742
    @mokkymiah2742 3 года назад +2

    Maybe this is why aliens are not heeding our signals

    • @seanwebb605
      @seanwebb605 Год назад

      They're busy watching the episodes of Matlock that we sent them.

  • @lovepeace5845
    @lovepeace5845 2 года назад +3

    How did Tom Paris not recognise morse code, considering his familiarity with it?

    • @patrickschulz2193
      @patrickschulz2193 Год назад +1

      Maybe he wanted to give someone else a chance to shine

    • @akmi1931
      @akmi1931 Год назад

      I’m sure most officers had at least heard OF Morse code but likely never heard it actually being used in action.
      All, Balina (sp?) was former Maqui (sp?) and wouldn’t of cared about Earth history at all. And Tom was dishonorably discharged from Star Fleet.

  • @AECRADIO1
    @AECRADIO1 3 года назад

    The 37s....

  • @Exospray
    @Exospray 3 года назад +2

    1:07 So we don't scan a good portion of the electromagnetic spectrum? That seems really stupid. Though it could be just not scanned by the communications system.

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 2 года назад +2

      why would they would be intently scanning for light or less then light speed signals? they don't want to deal with non warp species so they only listen to subspace signals. watching non warp species is a specialist division of the federation

    • @Flielow
      @Flielow 2 года назад

      There's a huge amount of anomalies that travel at less than the speed of light come on now try harder.

  • @Hawkusone
    @Hawkusone 11 месяцев назад

    That seems like a very bad idea to use in modern practice aboard a future Starship. Not monitoring for other ltl speed signals. Especially since they're stranded in the Delta quadrant , maybe they would miss a important communication that would help them find a quicker way home.

  • @michaelschweigart3517
    @michaelschweigart3517 Год назад

    "... only travel at the speed of light, too slow for interstellar communications"

  • @therickman1990
    @therickman1990 3 года назад +5

    So about 440 years and it starts and idles right away?

    • @benrussell-gough1201
      @benrussell-gough1201 3 года назад +3

      It's sort of surprising that the metals in the engine haven't crystallised from the near-absolute zero cold soak and just shattered when moved.

    • @therickman1990
      @therickman1990 3 года назад

      @@benrussell-gough1201 yes and that

  • @xadam2dudex
    @xadam2dudex 3 года назад +1

    Did he pick up the 1936 Ford at a local auction ?

  • @mattheww2797
    @mattheww2797 2 года назад

    Janeway would have known what morse code is and they all sure would have known why an RF frequency wasn't being monitored by hard to believe they wouldn't have been looking for background radiation especially radio frequencies all the time

    • @seanwebb605
      @seanwebb605 Год назад

      Yes if they had a digital to analogue translator or understood the history of early radio telescopes they obviously would have understand the principle of old radio transmissions.

  • @mitchhaelann9215
    @mitchhaelann9215 3 года назад +5

    Leading up to this, in the episode, they find traces of gasoline in space. That's a stretch. But when one crewmember identified it as a petroleum product from its chemical makeup, Janeway asks 'How did it get here?', they just ASSUMED it was from earth? No other culture/species in the entire galaxy ever developed gasoline? None? Not one? Really? No industrial revolutions anywhere? From beasts of burden to solar and fusion power overnight, all of them?

    • @claudiov5554
      @claudiov5554 2 года назад

      that's a good point

    • @thomasalvarez6456
      @thomasalvarez6456 2 года назад

      I think they meant Petroleum from Earth? They could just be me making excuses.

    • @JamieAllen1977
      @JamieAllen1977 2 года назад

      fossil fuels across the universe probably have distinctions.

    • @skellith5441
      @skellith5441 2 года назад

      I don't think they assumed it was from earth. It's more likely they were referring to it being in space and not on a planet. I mean petroleum isn't exactly the best fuel for interstellar travel

  • @mitche5007
    @mitche5007 2 года назад

    Too slow for interstellar communications thank you Mr. Kim

  • @tilasole3252
    @tilasole3252 Год назад

    Why is Janeway so uncomfortably close to Paris. Was this before or after their joining?

  • @FortoFight
    @FortoFight 4 года назад +3

    How did Belanna run it through the computer that quickly? It's not like they held a microphone up to it or anything, and I doubt they interfaced the car's radio with the main computer.

    • @Ser_Salty
      @Ser_Salty 3 года назад +3

      You know how often they say "Computer, locate [person]!"? Yeah, the computer can listen to anything on the ship

    • @jijonbreaker
      @jijonbreaker 3 года назад +5

      @@Ser_Salty Not only that, but it's not just coming from the car. It's still a frequency the entire ship is receiving. All she had to do was tune into the signal itself.

    • @mitchhaelann9215
      @mitchhaelann9215 3 года назад +1

      @@Ser_Salty Technically, I think the computer is big-brother listening to everything and everyone at all times, just so it's ready to answer when prompted. That's why it answers so fast, it already heard the rest of the conversation and knows what you're about to ask, it's just not allowed to say anything until you ask it.

    • @rionka
      @rionka 2 года назад +1

      @@mitchhaelann9215 okay google vibes here!😃

    • @edwardhamham2452
      @edwardhamham2452 2 года назад

      @@Ser_Salty Actually that just goes by where a crew member's combadge is. We've seen before that when someone takes it off, the computer reports them being in the location of their combadge and not where they actually are.

  • @bernardgray979
    @bernardgray979 2 года назад

    Which episode?

    • @claudiov5554
      @claudiov5554 2 года назад +1

      the 1st episode of the second season, "The 37's".

  • @ModestNeophyte
    @ModestNeophyte 2 года назад

    B'elanna just basically used Voyager's soundhound app to identify a song. And Harry ran tracert

  • @charletonzimmerman4205
    @charletonzimmerman4205 3 года назад +1

    How did a "Black Man" own "Property" & buy a New Truck, in 1937?. Was he a WWI, veteran? In the Depression?

    • @dougc190
      @dougc190 3 года назад +2

      Plenty of black people owned property during that time.

    • @nathancox7509
      @nathancox7509 2 года назад +1

      Not to play devils advocate but but Fredrick Douglas was born a slave, acquired his freedom, became a preacher and abolitionist all before the civil war even had started. After the civil war he became an author and speaker, as well as able to build a house in Washington DC. I understand the story seems far fetched but not impossible. Even though highly improbable, if he owned land before the depression there is a possibility that he could have bought the truck. Something else about the Great Depression, the worst year was 1929, also FDR was elected president in 1932, and before the end of 1933, he started his fireside chats over the radio, pushed forward for changes in the banking industry, and started the CCC. The Ccc not only put thousands of people to work on numerous public works projects, but also put money in the hands of young men, to give to their family’s, but also gave them a job. Nothing’s impossible just highly improbable.

    • @houstonhelicoptertours1006
      @houstonhelicoptertours1006 2 года назад

      You sound like a colossal sheep. 😂

  • @Xylarxcode
    @Xylarxcode 3 года назад +4

    Heh. Star Trek. Where they're supposed to spend most of their time making contact with new alien species or investigating curious space anomalies, but they spend half their time doing things that relate to Earth and its past. But nothing from between the 20th and 24th century because that would require effort and continuity to maintain, so instead they dig into the past of anything pre 20th century so we can relate to what's going on, even if it takes place 70.000 light years from our planet.
    If I sound bitter, it's because I am. This is by far one of my least favourite episodes in all of Trek. Not just Voyager. Trek in general.

  • @Studiogu-xj4ym
    @Studiogu-xj4ym Год назад

    ???

  • @johnchristina1340
    @johnchristina1340 5 лет назад +2

    Suspension of disbelief.

    • @jayluck8047
      @jayluck8047 3 года назад

      Leaf spring suspension in a ‘36 Ford.
      Gives extra meaning to Tom’s line: “This is one step above the horse and buggy.”, considering even buggies didn’t have those at first.
      Ironic too, because I just came here after watching a clip of a texting-teen getting destroyed by an older guy sitting at a telegraph in a “send message” challenge on Conan. The second irony, is that I’ve always said: “I consider texting to be one step above the telegraph.”

    • @houstonhelicoptertours1006
      @houstonhelicoptertours1006 2 года назад

      Get over yourself. You're not as smart as you think. ;)

  • @claudiov5554
    @claudiov5554 2 года назад +2

    The question is, what was that car doing in space and how did it endure 400 years floating in space?, no one answered that question in the entire episode ,LAME

    • @dawn1berlitz
      @dawn1berlitz 2 года назад +1

      space is like a vacuum so there wouldnt be any oxygen and likely any moisture to react to the metal chassis of the truck why do you think astronauts have a suit and helmet when they have to go out and work on stuff outside of the ISS or a shuttle

    • @netwolfe
      @netwolfe 2 года назад +1

      I think you are suppose to assume it was on board a spaceship. From the same space aliens that abducted the other humans they found. The space ship got damaged or destroyed sending the truck into space. Kind of like how ship's cargo get's thrown overboard in a storm, or drifting away from a ship while they sink.

  • @JaredMisaki1
    @JaredMisaki1 3 года назад +1

    Why do I feel smarter than these folk when it comes to past tech and thinking?

    • @benrussell-gough1201
      @benrussell-gough1201 3 года назад

      Not unjustifiable. I do get the impression that 24th-Century folk are a bit too reliant on uber-tech to do their thinking and heavy lifting for them.

    • @JaredMisaki1
      @JaredMisaki1 3 года назад

      @@benrussell-gough1201 the way they talk while the elephant is in the room its analytical, but a touch insulting. I look at a Norman helmet, a civil war Musket, or a ww2 tank and I would be relating and understanding of its value. Paris is close to that type of character

    • @theblackwidower
      @theblackwidower 2 года назад

      What bugs me about all this is that, I don't care how advanced communication tech becomes in the 24th century, I refuse to believe Starfleet Academy wouldn't at least mention to their cadets that Morse code exists. Military academies teach it today, and we're already light years beyond it. Because it's one of those things where, when all other forms of communications fail, you should still be able to send or receive a binary message in morse code.

  • @spudhead169
    @spudhead169 3 года назад +4

    0:27 "Oh! What was that?"
    it was.......
    Terrible acting.