How about the Daedalus class, from Srargate Atlantis. It could go from Earth to the Pegasus Galaxy, defined in the series as being 3,000,000 light years away, in a couple of months.
I feel like the easy winner of this contest is the TARDIS, which takes you instantly anywhere in time and space. It's also the easy loser on realism, because it's just magic.
Looking forward to this series! FTL request: A ship using the quantum slipstream drive that occasionally turned up in Voyager. Non-FTL request: the Rocinante from The Expanse
I believe those times are for observers watching the vessel going on away. For those onboard, it should be zero time elapsed or since so many times faster than light, reversed time onboard!?
None of the ships in the Firefly / Serenity universe have ftl capabilities. All of the worlds in the 'verse are in a single, albeit giant and wholly implausible, solar system.
The Andromeda, it used a Slip stream drive to traverse the 3 galaxy commonwealth.😊 Quick question, what exactly is the difference between slip stream and warp drive? Thanks
Orion is not a place, it's a direction. And it is not in the direction of the galaxy known as M31, which is in the constellation Andromeda. Orion and Andromeda are directions, not places.
The Orion Nebula is in the Orion constellation which is situated between our solar system and the galaxies edge. M31 is also known as The Andromeda Galaxy
@@popculturescientist Yes, but I was just commenting on how you transitioned from going from M42 to M31. You made it sound like one could just continue on from M31 to M42, but instead one has to make a significant change in direction. This is just a soapbox of mine, how the layperson speaks of constellations as if they are places, which they are not.
I explain my choice of orientation of Andromeda in the description. I specify the Orion Nebula in the Orion constellation and I also specify the Andromeda Galaxy in the Andromeda Constellation. I do not speak about constellations. This is a fun video where I chose a ‘racetrack’ that I laid out. I specifically chose a straight line from our solar system to Orion to the edge of the galaxy and then up to Andromeda. I even show the direction change around Orion.
How about the Daedalus class, from Srargate Atlantis. It could go from Earth to the Pegasus Galaxy, defined in the series as being 3,000,000 light years away, in a couple of months.
I feel like the easy winner of this contest is the TARDIS, which takes you instantly anywhere in time and space. It's also the easy loser on realism, because it's just magic.
Looking forward to this series! FTL request: A ship using the quantum slipstream drive that occasionally turned up in Voyager. Non-FTL request: the Rocinante from The Expanse
Definitely want to do the Rocinante!!
Love this. I’ll make the popcorn. My money is on the Infinite Improbability Drive
Why is the volume so low?
I have hearing issues. I had to turn the volume all the way up and it’s still a bit hard.Subtitles ftw. Lol 😂
Update, it’s better now. 😂
I believe those times are for observers watching the vessel going on away.
For those onboard, it should be zero time elapsed or since so many times faster than light, reversed time onboard!?
Liberator from Blake’s 7, best ship in the universe
I love chaos…keep it up
Serenity, Firefly class.
None of the ships in the Firefly / Serenity universe have ftl capabilities. All of the worlds in the 'verse are in a single, albeit giant and wholly implausible, solar system.
They don’t have to be ftl ships!! Totally happy to do Serenity if I can work out the speed!
@@popculturescientist Jayne will be in his bunk… for a very long time.
The Andromeda, it used a Slip stream drive to traverse the 3 galaxy commonwealth.😊
Quick question, what exactly is the difference between slip stream and warp drive?
Thanks
cant wait for more
The Atlantis from star gate
the falcon is in another galaxy so kinda not admissible. i would look at a borg vessel
If you're using the original scale it's 216 times c if you're using the updated scale it's still 216 times c but now it's warp 5 not warp 6
Volume is too low even at max.
Orion is not a place, it's a direction. And it is not in the direction of the galaxy known as M31, which is in the constellation Andromeda. Orion and Andromeda are directions, not places.
The Orion Nebula is in the Orion constellation which is situated between our solar system and the galaxies edge. M31 is also known as The Andromeda Galaxy
@@popculturescientist Yes, but I was just commenting on how you transitioned from going from M42 to M31. You made it sound like one could just continue on from M31 to M42, but instead one has to make a significant change in direction. This is just a soapbox of mine, how the layperson speaks of constellations as if they are places, which they are not.
I explain my choice of orientation of Andromeda in the description.
I specify the Orion Nebula in the Orion constellation and I also specify the Andromeda Galaxy in the Andromeda Constellation. I do not speak about constellations.
This is a fun video where I chose a ‘racetrack’ that I laid out. I specifically chose a straight line from our solar system to Orion to the edge of the galaxy and then up to Andromeda. I even show the direction change around Orion.
@@popculturescientist#micdrop