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Real world article
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The Enterprise discovers a ship that crashed on a Dyson sphere more than seventy-five years prior with a single survivor suspended in the transporter buffer: Captain Montgomery Scott.

Summary

Teaser

A Dyson sphere as viewed from the Enterprise bridge

A Dyson sphere as viewed from the Enterprise bridge

The USS Enterprise-D picks up a distress call from the USS Jenolan, a transport vessel that has been missing for seventy-five years. As the Enterprise drops out of warp and initiates a Code 1-Alpha-Zero response to the signal, the starship is rocked violently by a massive gravitational field. Although initial scans do not find the source of the field, they trace the field to its center and discover a massive spherical structure, two hundred million kilometers in diameter (about 2/3 of the Earth's orbital diameter around the Sun). The sphere's dimensions are consistent with those of the (until then) theoretical structure known as a Dyson sphere. Captain Picard is not surprised that Commander Riker has never heard of the old postulation of 20th century physicist Freeman Dyson, explaining that a hollow sphere built around a star could harness all of its radiant energy and provide a population living on the interior surface of the sphere, like any habitable planet, with a nearly inexhaustible source of power. The sphere's size creates massive gravimetric interference that interferes with sensors, preventing the Enterprise from locating it before the ship had dropped out of warp.

The USS Jenolan crashed on the surface of the Dyson sphere

The USS Jenolan crashed on the surface of the Dyson sphere

The Enterprise locates the Jenolan, having crashed on the surface of the sphere. Surprisingly, several small power readings are still emanating from the crashed ship, and life support systems are still operating, on minimal levels. Riker, Lieutenant Commander La Forge, and Lieutenant Worf beam aboard the Jenolan and find that, although some of the ship's systems are still functioning, there are no apparent signs of life. However, La Forge discovers that the transporters have been reconfigured in a strange manner – power has been drawn from the auxiliary systems (they were a regenerative power source), and pattern buffers are locked to cycle in a Level 4 diagnostic mode. Riker works out that by leaving the transporter in the diagnostic mode, it rerouted the matter array through the pattern buffer. Furthermore, La Forge finds a pattern is still in the buffer, and, amazingly, it has suffered almost no degradation, less than 0.003%. Riker wonders if someone could survive in the transporter buffer for seventy-five years, and La Forge finds out by rematerializing the stored pattern. Captain Montgomery "Scotty" Scott materializes on the transporter pad, his left arm in a makeshift sling of torn uniform cloth.

Act One

"Well, thank you, lads

"Well, thank you, lads."

After Scott thanks La Forge and Riker for rematerializing him, he runs over to the transporter console and attempts to retrieve a second pattern, that of Ensign Matt Franklin, but unfortunately, unlike the phase inducer that kept Scott's pattern intact, the phase inducer responsible for doing the same for Franklin's pattern has failed – although Scott has La Forge boost the gain on the matter stream, the pattern has degraded by 53% – too much for him to be rematerialized when the transporters cannot compensate. Riker offers his condolences and introduces La Forge and himself to Scott. When Riker explains that they came from the starship Enterprise, Scott reacts understandably, believing he was saved by a crew led by Jim Kirk in the decommissioned USS Enterprise-A, and asks how long he was in the pattern buffer. Worf interrupts the conversation to inform Riker that life support has been restored and the oxygen levels will soon return to normal. Riker introduces the security officer to Scott, who is surprised to learn that there is a Klingon officer serving in Starfleet and realizes that he has been in the buffer for an extremely long time.

The Enterprise in orbit around the sphere

The Enterprise in orbit around the sphere

After transporting back to the Enterprise, Riker begins suggesting going to sickbay, but Scott is distracted by immediately noticing that the transporter's resonator array has changed. Amused, Riker notes to La Forge that Scott will likely have many engineering questions, who assures him that he'll escort Scott. Stepping over to the system access panels, Scott asks what's been done to the duotronic enhancers, to which La Forge removes a panel and shows him the much more efficient isolinear chips that replaced them about forty years earlier; Scott is about to reach inside when La Forge warns that he was going to touch an EPS power tap.

As they exit for sickbay, Scott elaborates on what he told them on the Jenolan: they were on their way to the Norpin colony when there was an overload in a plasma transfer conduit, causing warp engine failure. The captain brought the ship out of warp, and they accidentally discovered the Dyson sphere through its gravimetric interference, much like what the Enterprise experienced. He marvels at the thought of the engineering skills just to design it. On La Forge asking about their first approach of the sphere, Scott continues that the standard survey of the surface had begun, and the first orbital scan was just being completed when the aft power coil suddenly exploded. Caught in the sphere's gravity well, the Jenolan fell toward the sphere and crashed on the surface; he and Franklin were the only survivors. When asked what inspired him to use the transporters to place himself and Franklin in such a state, Scott explains that there were too few supplies to survive long enough to be rescued, and so they had to think of something. La Forge tells Scott that he found his inventive use of the transporter to be "absolutely brilliant", but Scott acts modestly, noting that he thinks it was only fifty percent brilliant due to the fact that it didn't save Franklin. La Forge continues that he believes that Scott will enjoy the 24th century and all the advances they've made, while Scott confesses to being a bit overwhelmed with the impressive Enterprise-D as they step into a turbolift; La Forge tells him to just wait until he sees the holodeck.

In sickbay, Scott is diagnosed by Dr. Crusher with only minor injuries: his arm only has a hairline fracture of the humerus and will just ache for a couple of days. Picard enters sickbay and welcomes Scott aboard. He is surprised that Scott was on board the Jenolan, as the engineer wasn't listed in the crew manifest. However, Scott explains that he was traveling aboard the Jenolan as a passenger to the Norpin colony on Norpin V to enjoy his then-recent retirement from Starfleet. When La Forge is left with orders to study the Dyson sphere, Scott is eager to help, but Dr. Crusher advises him to rest; he acquiesces but appears to feel out of place with no work to do.

Scott is then escorted to his quarters by Ensign Kane, where he is awe-struck at the luxury that he is entitled to compared with starships of his time period, even for an admiral. Scott, with much enthusiasm, reminisces to Kane about his years in Starfleet, starting with explaining the mission with the Elas Dohlman and his troubles during shore leave on Argelius II, but Kane has very little interest in Scott's nostalgia and politely tells him he has to return to duty, leaving Scott alone, feeling much less enthusiastic and somewhat pensive about his new life in the 24th century.

Act Two

"I'm not here for a tour, laddie. I'm here to help

"I'm not here for a tour, laddie. I'm here to help."

As La Forge and his team are working on their spectrographic analysis of the sphere, Scott interrupts, having received his issued combadge, insisting on offering La Forge his assistance. Lieutenant Bartel tries to inform him that engineering is restricted to authorized personnel only, but La Forge allows him to stay. La Forge skeptically accepts Scott's offer for help and the team begin their duties. Meanwhile, on the bridge, Data reports to Captain Picard that the sphere was built around a G-type star and that its interior surface provides an environment much like that of an M-Class planet, but there are no apparent signs of inhabitants. Picard orders four probes to be launched to speed up the scans of the sphere. Back in engineering, Scott finds further advances and changes in technology that in his era were dangerous. He recalls when he had to create an entire new start-up sequence to cold start the engines when his Enterprise was spiraling down to Psi 2000. La Forge is quietly becoming irritated until Scott offers advice on how to deal with Starfleet captains. When La Forge finally voices his frustration and tells Scott that he has a lot of work to do and that he is in the way, the older engineer berates his younger counterpart and leaves engineering in a disgruntled state.

Data offers Scott a bottle of Aldebaran whiskey

Data offers Scott a bottle of Aldebaran whiskey

Later, Scott arrives in Ten Forward, walks over to the lounge's bar and orders a drink of Scotch whisky, neat. He is repulsed when he tastes the drink, disputing with the confused young waiter that it's actually Scotch. Sitting nearby at the bar (likely to study social interactions), Data approaches and explains to Scott about the invention of synthehol to replace alcohol in the majority of traditional spirits. Data offers Scott an alcoholic drink from Guinan's personal supply, stepping behind the bar and pulling out a bottle with a neon green liquid inside. After being asked by Scott what it is, Data attempts a rudimentary examination by sight and smell, but cannot describe it any more precisely than, "it is green." The engineer's reaction to this drink is much more pleasant and Data shortly tops up his glass.

Act Three

Scott remembers the good times on board "his" Enterprise

Scott remembers the good times on board "his" Enterprise

In a slightly drunken state, with the bottle of green spirits and the glass in his hands, Scott arrives outside one of the holodecks, having also been informed about them by Data, and requests a simulation of the bridge of his ship. The computer states that his request is insufficient, so Scott says in annoyance that he wants to see the bridge of the Enterprise. The computer states that there have been five Federation starships with that name and asks Scott to specify by registry number. Scott then states slowly and clearly, "NCC-1701. No bloody A, B, C, or D." The computer accepts his instructions and creates an authentic replica of the bridge. In an instant, Scott feels like he's come home.

The sounds of old-style duotronic instruments fill the air as Scott fondly remembers his time aboard his former ship. As he muses around, he can see the Enterprise is in orbit of the planet Gideon on the viewscreen, as if no time has passed, and raises a toast to his absent comrades. He sits down at his old engineering station and gives a deep, dejected sigh just as Captain Picard walks in after coming off duty and excuses himself for interrupting, as he wanted to see how Scott was doing. Scott perks up and welcomes him into the simulation, offering Picard a drink, which he happily accepts. Just as Scott is about to warn Picard that it's not synthehol, Picard downs a glassful, which he identifies as Aldebaran whiskey, and explains that he was the one who gave it to Guinan. Picard recognizes the bridge as that of a Constitution-class starship and explains that there's one like it in the Fleet Museum but notes that the simulation is that of Scott's Enterprise. Scott clarifies that he served on two, but this is the first one and the first ship he ever served on as chief engineer. Scott mentions that he served on eleven ships of varying class, but that this Enterprise is the only one he misses or thinks about.

Picard then recalls his first command on the USS Stargazer while taking a seat at Pavel Chekov's old navigation console. Picard describes the Stargazer as overworked, underpowered, and always on the verge of flying apart at the seams. Picard says that while his Enterprise is far superior, there are days when he'd give almost anything to command the Stargazer again. Scott compares their feelings to the first time a man falls in love and says that he never loves a woman quite the same way again. They then share a toast to the original Enterprise and to the Stargazer, with Scott calling them "old girlfriends we'll never meet again." Picard then asks Scott what he thinks of the Enterprise-D. Scott calls her a beauty with a good crew but, when knowingly prompted by Picard, laments that when he was on his Enterprise, he could tell the speed of the ship just by the feel of the deck plates. He then begins to feel gloomy and opines that he is in the way and obsolete in the 24th century.

"Computer, shut this bloody thing off! It's time I acted my age

"Computer, shut this bloody thing off! It's time I acted my age."

When Picard offers to let Scott peruse the updated technical manuals, Scott refuses with a chuckle, saying that he's not eighteen anymore and can't start out again like a raw cadet. He says there is a time when a man knows it's time to quit and time to stop living in the past: the Enterprise was his home and where he had a purpose, but he bitterly acknowledges that what they're in isn't real and it comes down to now being an old man, hiding in a "computer-generated fantasy." He then shuts off the bridge simulation and leaves the holodeck feeling dejected but determined to start acting his age. Picard can only look on sadly as the legendary engineer exits, clearly feeling for the man.

The following day, Picard asks La Forge in his ready room about recovering the logs of the Jenolan for their orbital survey scan, but the engineer says that all efforts so far have yielded very little, as the ship's computer core was heavily damaged when it crashed. Picard suggests having Scott assist in trying to recover the ship's logs; La Forge agrees that Scott would be of great help as he knows the Jenolan's systems better than anybody on the Enterprise and says that he'll send Lt. Bartel with Scott over to the Jenolan. At this point, the captain gets up from his desk and asks that La Forge personally accompany Scott back to the Jenolan instead, hoping to make the old officer feel useful again. Picard makes it clear that this is a request, not an order, and will understand if he declines. While La Forge understands the captain's motive, he's not thrilled with the prospect but also clearly feels he can't turn the captain down.

As La Forge leaves the bridge to prepare, Data discovers a communications array in close proximity to the Enterprise's current location, and the crew sets a course for it. Later, La Forge paces as he waits in the transporter room for Scott, who is late. He finally arrives with a bit of a hangover but states that he'll manage when La Forge asks if he's okay. They immediately transport over to the Jenolan.

As the Enterprise arrives at the array, the crew discovers a large hatch in the Dyson sphere, which they presume is a front door. As they open hailing frequencies, the hatch opens and a series of powerful tractor beams pull the Enterprise inside the sphere, easily overpowering it.

Act Four

The Enterprise is pulled into the sphere

The Enterprise is pulled into the sphere

Due to the fact that the resonance frequency of the tractor beams used to pull the Enterprise inside is incompatible with the starship's power systems, the relays for the warp and impulse drive overload and are rendered inoperable. The Enterprise has now lost primary and auxiliary systems and the ship is soon released from the tractor beams. However, because the Enterprise is still moving under the inertia of being towed in, it is heading directly for the star at the center of the sphere.

Back on board the Jenolan, Scott is having trouble with recovering the ship's log, calling the vessel "garbage." La Forge realizes that Scott is referring to both himself and the ship and tries to console him by saying that the basics of technology haven't changed a great deal in seventy-five years, the transporters of the Jenolan are still virtually identical to those of the Enterprise, subspace radio and sensors still operate on the same basic principles and that impulse engine design has changed very little in two centuries – long before Scott's time. La Forge adds that the Jenolan would probably still be in service had the vessel's structural damage not been so extensive. Scott is dismissive and retorts that nobody would want something as old as the Jenolan (and again hints at himself as well) but La Forge disagrees, saying that if the ship were in service, it could still "run circles around the Enterprise at impulse speeds – just because something's old, doesn't mean you throw it away." Scott feels much more welcome, and a bond begins to form between him and La Forge. With a renewed sense of purpose, Scott asks about the possibility of getting a device from his day called a dynamic mode converter that might help to recover the Jenolan's log entries. La Forge admits he hasn't seen anything like that in a long time but has something similar in mind that may do the job. When his call from his combadge to the Enterprise goes unanswered, Scott wonders if interference is blocking his call but La Forge determines that the Enterprise is gone.

Back on board the Enterprise, the ship is three minutes from being destroyed by the star. However, Commander Riker has managed to restore 30% power to the maneuvering thrusters, although they will still not be enough to save the ship from destruction. It is not until power is diverted from the auxiliary relay systems to the thrusters that Ensign Rager manages to turn the ship to achieve a stable orbit in the photosphere of the star. Picard demands to know how and why the Enterprise was towed in and orders Data to conduct a scan of the sphere's interior for lifeforms. When La Forge and Scott fail to locate the Enterprise, they realize that the starship must be inside the sphere. Although it seems impossible to repair the Jenolan's flight capability, the two engineers still try restoring power to the ship's engines.

On board the Enterprise, Data reports to Picard that the sphere is abandoned, and the star is highly unstable, expelling matter and severe bursts of radiation. This explains why the inhabitants of the sphere must have abandoned it. The android postulates that the Enterprise may have unintentionally triggered an automated series of piloting beams which would guide a starship inside the sphere – this would explain why the Enterprise was pulled inside without anyone occupying the sphere. When the star emits a solar flare, the Enterprise raises her shields accordingly but Worf reports that the vessel's shields are only operating at 23%. To worsen matters, the solar flares are becoming larger and within three hours, the Enterprise's shields will no longer be enough to protect the starship from harm.

Act Five

The Jenolan wedged between the enormous doors of the Dyson sphere's hatch

The Jenolan wedged between the enormous doors of the Dyson sphere's hatch

La Forge and Scott work on repairing the Jenolan's engines by jury rigging the ship's supply of deuterium – La Forge initially insists that Scott's suggestion to send it through the auxiliary tank can't be done, but when he cites impulse engine specifications, Scott laughs, claims authorship of the regulation in question, and assures him that, while he knew the tank could handle the pressure, on paper a good engineer should be more cautious than in the field. La Forge is left impressed when power is restored shortly thereafter. When Scott offers La Forge the captain's chair, La Forge is surprised, as Scott is the senior officer on duty. However, Scott tells La Forge that, while he holds the rank of captain, all he ever wanted to be was an engineer. La Forge smiles at him and accepts command while Scott moves to the engineering console. Meanwhile, the Enterprise is heavily damaged by the star's solar flares, but Riker reports that partial impulse power has been restored. Picard asks Worf if the ship's phasers could be used to cut their way out through the shell of the sphere, but the sphere is composed of carbon-neutronium and their weapons would be completely ineffective.

As the Jenolan slowly orbits the sphere, La Forge and Scott trace the impulse ion trail from the Enterprise to the hatch that the starship was pulled into. The ion trail's momentum distribution around the hatch suggests that the Enterprise's impulse engines were at full reverse and that the starship was dragged into the sphere unwillingly. Scott recalls that near the end of their orbital scan, the Jenolan found hundreds of the arrays and, following standard procedure, opened hailing frequencies. Noting that the procedure hasn't changed, La Forge realizes that the hatches are access terminals (and not communications arrays), which are triggered by certain subspace frequencies, such as Starfleet's hailing frequencies. The tractor beams must have locked on to the Jenolan, severely damaging it and ultimately causing the crash, and this time have pulled the Enterprise inside.

Congratulated by Scott on his reasoning, La Forge ponders on how they can open the hatch for the Enterprise to escape without getting the Jenolan pulled in as well. Scott suggests that all they really need to do is get their foot in the door: position the Jenolan 500,000 kilometers away from the hatch, then open hailing frequencies so that the hatch will open but the tractor beams will miss the ship. As the hatch begins to close, the Jenolan would enter a gap between the doors and use the vessel's shields to hold the doors open for the Enterprise to exit the sphere. La Forge protests that the idea is crazy and suicidal, but Scott pleads to him that the theory will work, as he has spent his entire life figuring out crazy ways to do things. La Forge makes the decision to go ahead with Scott's plan.

The Enterprise escaping the sphere

The Enterprise escaping the sphere

The engineers get back to the hatch at full impulse and wedge the Jenolan lengthwise between the doors; the shields hold, and La Forge opens a communications channel to the Enterprise. The starship receives the hail and at once sets a course for the hatch. The Jenolan suffers heavy damage while the craft is wedged in the hatch, and while Scott keeps the ship and shields together, he eventually tells La Forge that he's done all he can. The ship's plasma intercooler is gone, and the engines are beginning to overheat. As helm control has been lost, La Forge tells Picard that the Enterprise will have to destroy the ship to escape. When the Enterprise is in transporter range of the Jenolan, Picard gives the order to beam La Forge and Scott back on board (with the Jenolan's shields still raised) once they're in range and, after a moment's pause, fire the photon torpedoes, destroying the old vessel. The doors continue to close, but the Enterprise manages to exit the sphere. As La Forge and Scott walk off the transporter pad, Scott is cheerfully relieved to be returned to safety, to which La Forge chuckles.

"Captain's log, Stardate 46125.3. Starfleet has dispatched two science vessels to study the Dyson sphere while we proceed to Starbase 55."
The senior staff bids Scott farewell

The senior staff bids Scott farewell

Later, La Forge tells Scott about the Enterprise's encounter with a newborn lifeform on Stardate 44614.6. On La Forge's explanation of what they did to detach the infant, Scott immediately catches on that the solution was to 'sour the milk' (TNG: "Galaxy's Child"). It is obvious that a strong bond has formed between the two engineers. Scott was expecting La Forge to take him for a drink in Ten Forward, but La Forge had different intentions. As they walk through the doors to one of the Enterprise's shuttlebays, the senior staff is revealed, standing in front of a shuttlecraft, the Goddard. Picard offers Scott the craft on "an extended loan" basis in thanks for sacrificing the Jenolan to save the Enterprise. Scott says that he won't be going to the Norpin colony as he had first planned, realizing now that he himself can still be useful in this century. The senior staff bids Scott farewell: he says goodbye to them all, save Worf.

Scott reveals his approval of the Enterprise-D, the crew, and the starship's engineer. He tells La Forge that over the years, he has found that a starship is only as good as the engineer who takes care of her. From what he has seen, he believes the Enterprise is in good hands. After shaking La Forge's hand, he begins to depart the Enterprise in his new shuttlecraft. "You take care of yourself out there," La Forge tells Scott. "Aye," Scott says before disembarking.

Memorable quotes

"Well, thank you lads."

- Scott, to La Forge and Riker after being released from a transporter buffer after 75 years


"The Enterprise?! I shoulda known – I'll bet Jim Kirk himself hauled the old gal outta mothballs to come lookin' for me!"

- Scott, after his rescuers identify themselves


"You know, I think you're going to enjoy the 24th century, Mr. Scott. We've made some pretty incredible advances these last eighty years."

- La Forge, to Scott


"How are you feeling?"
"I don't know. How am I feeling?"
"Other than a few bumps and bruises, I'd say you feel fine for a man of 147."
"And I don't feel a day over a hundred and twenty."

- Picard, Scott, and Dr. Crusher


"Well, I'll say this about your Enterprise… the doctors are a fair sight prettier."

- Scott, referring to Dr. Crusher


"Good lord man, where have you put me?"
"These are standard guest quarters, sir, I can try and find something bigger if you want."
"Bigger? In my day, even an admiral would notta had such quarters aboard a starship!"

- Scott, marveling at the size of his quarters, with Ensign Kane misinterpreting his exclamation


"Starship captains are like children. They want everything right now and they want it their way. The secret is to give them what they need, not what they want."

- Scott, offering La Forge advice on handling Starfleet captains


"I told the captain I would have this diagnostic done in an hour."
"And how long will it really take you?"
"An hour!"
"Oh, you didn't tell him how long it would really take, did you?"
"Of course I did."
"Oh, laddie, you have a lot to learn if you want people to think of you as a miracle worker."

- La Forge and Scott, revealing the secret to his reputation


"I was drivin' starships while your great-grandfather was still in diapers! I think you'd be a little grateful for some help! I'll leave ya to work, Mr. La Forge."

- Scott, to La Forge, after being told that he is in the way


"Laddie, I was drinking scotch a hundred years before you were born. And I can tell you that whatever this is, it is definitely not scotch."

- Scott, after drinking synthehol


"You're not quite, uh… Human, are you"
"No, sir. I am an android. Lieutenant Commander Data."

- Scott and Data


"Synthetic scotch, synthetic commanders…"

- Scott, aloud to himself on synthehol and Data


"It is… it is… it is green."

- Data, attempting to analyze Aldebaran whiskey
This was nearly the same line as Scott's description of a similar beverage to the Kelvan Tomar in "By Any Other Name"


"Please enter program."
"The android at the bar said ya' could show me ma' old ship. Lemme see it."
"Insufficient data. Please specify parameters."
"The Enterprise! Show me the bridge of the Enterprise, ya' chatterin' piece of…"
"There have been five Federation ships with that name. Please specify by registry number."
"NCC-1701. No bloody A, B, C, or D."
"Program complete. Enter when ready."

- The Computer and Scott, about the first starship Enterprise on the holodeck


"… Here's to ya', lads…"

- Scott, on the holodeck recreation of the empty bridge of the Enterprise (NCC-1701), raising a toast to his long-gone crewmates


"Would you have a drink with me, Captain?"
"Thank you!"
"I don't know what it is, exactly, but I would be real careful, it's real…" (Picard downs it in one gulp before he can heed this warning)
"Aldeberan whiskey… (noting the surprise on Scott's face) … who do you think gave it to Guinan?"

- Scott and Picard


"Ah, it's like the first time you fall in love. You never love a woman quite like that again. To the Enterprise and the Stargazer – old girlfriends we'll never meet again."

- Scott, discussing with Picard the ships on which they first served as chief engineer and captain, respectively


"When I was here, I could tell ya the speed that we were travelin' by the feel of the deck plates."

- Scott, talking about his Enterprise (NCC-1701), compared to the Enterprise-D


"There comes a time when a man finds he can't fall in love again. He knows it's time to stop. I don't belong on your ship. I belong on this one. This was my home. This was where I had a purpose…"

- Scott, to Picard on the recreated NCC-1701 bridge


"Computer, shut this bloody thing off!"

- Scott, asking the computer to end the holodeck program


"Mr. La Forge, I understand that before the Jenolan crashed, it had conducted an extensive survey of the Dyson sphere. Have we been able to access any of those records?"
"We did try to download their memory core, but it was pretty heavily damaged in the crash. We actually haven't been able to get much out of it."
"Perhaps Captain Scott could be of use in accessing that material."
"It's possible. He does know those systems better than any of us. I'll have Lieutenant Bartel beam down with him."
"Mr. La Forge… I would like you to accompany Captain Scott."
"Me, sir?"
"Yes. Look, this is not an order. It's a request, and it's one which you must feel perfectly free to decline. You see, one of the most important things in a person's life is to feel useful. Now, Mr. Scott is a Starfleet officer, and I would like him to feel useful again."
"I'll go with him, sir."
"Thank you."

- Picard and La Forge


"Bunch of old, useless garbage…"

- Scott, referring not only to the Jenolan's systems but to himself as well


"Just 'cause something's old doesn't mean you throw it away."

- La Forge, on how both the Jenolan and Scott are still good in their own way


"The tank can't handle that much pressure."
"Where'd you get that idea?"
"What do you mean, where did I get that idea? It's in the impulse engine specifications."
"Regulations 42/15: 'Pressure Variances in IRC Tank Storage'?"
"Yeah."
"Forget it. I wrote it… A good engineer is always a wee bit conservative, at least on paper. Just bypass the secondary cutoff valve and boost the flow. It'll work."

- La Forge and Scott


"Take the bridge, Commander."
"Oh no… you're the senior officer here."
"Oh, I may be captain by rank… but I never wanted to be anything else but an engineer."

- Scott and La Forge


"Geordi, I have spent my whole life trying to figure out crazy ways of doing things."

- Scott, to La Forge


"See now that wasn't so bad, was it?"

- Scott, to La Forge


"A good crew… and a fine ship – a credit to her name. But I've always found that a ship is… only as good as the engineer who takes care of her – and from what I can see, the Enterprise is in good hands."

- Scott's parting words to La Forge

Background information

Production history

Story

Production

eDavid Stipes and Dan Curry inspecting the Dyson Sphere maquette Exterior Dyson sphere maquettes assembled for filming Greg Jein with Dyson sphere model
Stipes (kneeling) and Curry inspecting the door panel of the exterior maquette…
…assembled with the other exterior panels for filming
Dyson sphere interior maquette with builder Jein
SD-103 model refurbished as the USS Jenolan Dan Curry touching up the USS Jenolan model at Image G
The studio model of the USS "Jenolin"…
…touched up by Dan Curry before filming at Image G
Burton and Doohan between filming

Burton and Doohan between filming

Bridge set

Considerable effort was put in the recreating the bridge of the original Enterprise for Scott's scenes on the holodeck by the production staff. For a detailed treatise on the recreation of the original bridge, please refer to: Constitution-class sets: "Relics"

Deleted scene

Scott and Troi in the deleted scene

Scott and Troi in the deleted scene

Continuity

Cast and characters

Reception

Apocrypha

The "Relics" storyline has been followed up in three separate comic book stories:

The novel Engines of Destiny is a partial sequel to this episode; Engines opens looking at Scott's initial emotional state after Kirk's 'death' and his meeting with Matt Franklin (indirectly prompted by Guinan). The main plot focuses on Scott's attempt to use an old Klingon ship to attempt a slingshot maneuver to go back in time to the Enterprise-B's maiden voyage to save Kirk, believing that he can beam Kirk out in the moment after Kirk reconfigured the Enterprise-B's deflectors but before the Nexus struck the ship without changing history. However, this unwittingly changes history to create a timeline where the Borg have assimilated Earth and are conquering the Alpha Quadrant – implied to the reader to be the result of the Borg's use of time travel in Star Trek: First Contact being successful in the absence of Picard – requiring Kirk and Scott to work with the Enterprise-D (which followed Scott during the slingshot maneuver) and the alternate version of Sarek to send Kirk back to the Nexus and restore history.

Home media format releases

Links and references

Starring

Also starring

Guest stars

And

Special guest star

Co-stars

Uncredited co-stars

Stand-ins

References

20th century; 2169; 2222; 2241; 2294; 2329; 24th century; access terminal; Admiral; alcohol; Aldebaran whiskey; antenna array; Argelius; articulation frame; auxiliary tank; "back full"; background radiation; "bloody"; bon voyage; Brahms, Leah; cadet; Captain; career; centimeter; chief engineer; class 4 probe; class B solar flare; class M; Code 1-Alpha-Zero; color; combadge; communications device; computer terminal; conduit interface; conservative; Constitution-class; containment field; cryo-pump; cut-off valve; deck plate; deuterium; diagnostic cycle; diaper; dilithium; Dohlman; duotronic enhancers; dynamic mode converter; Dyson, Freeman; Dyson sphere; Dyson sphere star; Earth; Elaan; Elas; emitter array; engineer; engineering; Enterprise, USS; Enterprise-A, USS; Enterprise-B, USS; Enterprise-C, USS; Enterprise bridge holoprogram, USS; EPS power tap; "excuse me"; extended loan; Federation; Federation science vessel (science vessel); Fleet Museum; flight path; food replicator; Franklin, Matt; frequency; G-type star; gigawatt; girlfriend; Goddard; gravimetric fluctuation; gravitational field; gravity well; Guinan; gymnasium; hairline fracture; helm control; hemisphere; Heisenberg compensator; holodeck; hotel room; hour; humerus; impulse engine; impulse engine relay; impulse engine specifications; impulse speed; IRC tank; isolinear chip; Jenolan, USS; Junior; jury rig; Kirk, Jim; La Forge's great-grandfather; level 4 diagnostic; life support; main drive assembly; matter array; matter stream; memory core; Midsummer Night's Dream, A; miracle worker; mothballs; multiphase autocontainment field; navigational charts; neutronium; New Jersey, USS; Norpin colony; Norpin V; number one; orbit; oxygen; paper; pattern buffer; pattern degradation; personification; phase inducer; phase lock; phase 7 survey; phaser; photosphere; physicist; plasma intercooler; power converter; Pressure Variances in IRC Tank Storage; Psi 2000; rematerialization subroutine; resonator array; Scotch whisky; Scott's past ships; senior officer; stellar body; senior officer; sensor analysis; shock; short range scan; sickbay; signal degradation; sling; Sol; solar flare; spectrographic analysis; square kilometer; stale; standard survey; star; Starbase 55; Stargazer, USS; subspace radio; surface area; synchronous orbit; synthehol (aka "synthetic scotch"); synthetic; "synthetic commander"; technical schematics; Ten Forward; toast; tractor beam; transport ship; transporter; Transporter Room 3; transporter suspension; unnamed sector; warp engine relay; warp field; "wee"

Display graphic references

annular confinement beam; antimatter injector; biofilter assembly; diagnostic mode; Heisenberg compensator; imaging scanner; inducer module; level 4 diagnostic; matter/antimatter reaction chamber; matter injector; pattern buffer; phase transition coils; primary energizing coils; Sydney-class; transport

Meta references

47

Further reading

External links