IIRC, the gravity on some ship or part of a ship failed in the 6th movie, "The Undiscovered Country". I remember a scene with Klingon (pink) blood drops floating in midair.
I don't remember any other time the gravity has failed.
2006-07-08 16:55:36
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answer #1
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answered by Flyboy 6
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Because weightless special effects are too expensive to film. But they did it once or twice anyway. I recall a scene in at least one Star Trek movie that featured a disabled ship with no gravity.
2006-07-08 17:07:59
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answer #2
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answered by campbelp2002 7
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ITHINK that's the theory that Smoking isn't round contained in the twenty fourth Century . yet ingesting Is ... neither is powerful for you Medically (pleased with the exception of a tumbler of wine ) . you ought to Have idea Civilisation ought to Have Learnt ... BTW I Smoke and Drink Sod Being contained in the twenty fourth Century . ok This fairly is going out To Erica . you assert Your A scientist and yet the perception Of Teleportation Is no longer achievable ..... a real Scientist ought to comprehend That Todays concepts Are Tomorrows Theories and Visa Versa no longer something Is previous Our purposes . look at String theory That became so a procedures previous Our Comprehension That It became no longer Even Theorised Now we are placing out Our Minds To the perception ..... As A Scientist Your Mad till Your shown conceivable . I easily have An Ongoing Argument / Debate With a chum Of Mine . Its about for each efficient there's a detrimental with the exception of Gravity . How Can each and everything Bar one element etc etc ... Otherside Of A Nebula Or Black hollow We Dont understand Whats accessible . the international became Flat no longer so some time previous ....
2016-11-06 02:01:00
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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well buddy,id hate to burst ur bubble,BUT,star trek is a FICTIONAL tv show filmed not in space but on EARTH,meaning that since we have gravity,that it wouldnt be cos effective to turn it off.
2006-07-08 21:02:00
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answer #4
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answered by chevyman502 4
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Maybe it's some sort of steady-state apparatus, a gravitational equivalent of a super-conductor which, once "charged up", dosn't need to be tampered with or maintained to continue working indefinately.
2006-07-08 17:02:44
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answer #5
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answered by Argon 3
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OOh. Great question! Power rerouting? And if they have power supplies that can power a phaser, why do they still use little bitty flashlights on away missions?
2006-07-08 16:55:20
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answer #6
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answered by Skeff 6
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Because the filming studios don't have enough money to simulate that much zero-G.
2006-07-08 16:53:44
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answer #7
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answered by agentdenim 3
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Plot convenience.
2006-07-08 18:27:53
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answer #8
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answered by joe 2
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It has... on an episode of Enterprise... and while Captain Archer was in the SHOWER, no less... little beads of water EVERYWHERE!
2006-07-08 18:15:23
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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You can write anything in a script that you want.
That's the movies.
2006-07-08 16:53:56
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answer #10
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answered by cheeky chic 379 6
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