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Pre Hyperdrive? I think the Destiny's FTL Drive is pre hyperdrive. This because the ship was many million years ago. That would make it drive that uses something like tachyon imitation or subspace to travel that fast. What do you guess think?Railgun Out! (talk) (Contribs) 05:12, October 4, 2009 (UTC)

No, I don't think so --╔▲╠☼╚╡∩║▀⌠⅜⌡├┤∩ (talk) (Contribs) 07:12, October 4, 2009 (UTC)

I bet it is star trek-like warp drive. It probably has some advantages on hyperdrives, but has obvious disadvantage - if you don't know where you go you can just crush into sun, or planet, or black hole or something even worse --╔▲╠☼╚╡∩║▀⌠⅜⌡├┤∩ (talk) (Contribs) 21:06, October 4, 2009 (UTC)

I think the drive is used because sensors still work while it is active, which they dont in hyperspace Sman789 (talk) (Contribs) 18:26, October 9, 2009 (UTC)

yet

Hi, guys. We have argument about meaning of this qoute. Does "yet" mean just "but", or it means "not yet through hyperspace, becouse it's not so advanced"? --╔▲╠☼╚╡∩║▀⌠⅜⌡├┤∩ (talk) (Contribs) 17:39, October 9, 2009 (UTC)

The quote is "faster than light, yet not through hyperspace." In this context it means "but". Faster than light, but not through hyperspace. Cheers. Kal'el T | C - 19:13, October 9, 2009 (UTC)
I love how Stargate allways manages to get these epic lines in just the right place. I'm not sure if Epic is quite the word, but, you know, it makes it sound like supernatural in a way. It's like the feeling you get at the end of Lost City, Part 2 when all the drones and stuff are firing and O'neill goes into the sleeping chamber. Before I Sleep has lines like that as well. Allthough when you think back about when Rush said it, it is a little out of character to just stand there and say that, makes it sound as though he knew where the ninth chevron went in the first place and it was all part of his plan or something Sman789 (talk) (Contribs) 21:11, October 9, 2009 (UTC)

FTL engine on other Alteran/Ancient Ship

Hi guys, I had been wondering since the Ancients might use FTL engine before their invention of hyperdrive, is there any other ship belong to them that use it. I mean I am referring to the Alteran ship when they left the home galaxy as from the Stargate: The Ark of Truth movies I see that the ship traveled like the same method as Destiny. Can someone clarify about this? In addition could the Stargate seeding ship also equipped with FTL engine instead of hypedrive seeing the Destiny were sent after the seeding ship. Hafiedz (talk) (Contribs) 10:16, November 4, 2009 (UTC)

Rescue Mission?

If hyperspace is faster than FTL, shouldn't the SGC or Homeworld Defense be able to send a rescue mission after them?

They have a record of the Destiny's flight path.

Tau'ri Battlecruisers can travel the 2 million lightyears between Earth and Atlantis in 18 days.

Granted at that speed it would take something like 24.6 years to catch up with them, but weren't the Asgard able to travel from Ida to Earth much faster? And don't the Tau'ri have those designs in their database somewhere?

Just a thought.

~Sjadojai 74.127.220.106 15:29, December 17, 2009 (UTC)

No and no :D

Even if Hyperdrive is faster than FTL (and there's no evidence to suggest it is), the Destiny has been traveling for thousands or millions of years and so it would still take forever to catch it up. The fact that a ZPM can power a wormhole to a Pegasus even with both hands and a foot tied behind it's back, but even at full power can't power a gate to the Destiny suggests that the distance is thousands of times greater than the distance between MW and Pegasus. Sman789 (talk) (Contribs) 17:25, December 17, 2009 (UTC)

Given that Destiny is several billion light years away from Earth, the Earths fastest ship (Oddessy) would take years if not decades to reach Destiny. Considering Destiny has been in space for millions of years and that its only a few billion light years away she cannot be very fast at all even if she did drop out of FTL at every interesting planet. I estimate (Pure speculation) that Destiny can travel from anywhere between 300-12,000 times the speed of light at best. I base this on the fact that the Milky way gates are around 50 million years old at the oldest...now we know Destiny's gates are of an older design so assuming Destiny is about 55 Million years old....thats the sort of speeds that could be attained based on distance and time. As for the Asgard...yes they could reach Destiny easily...problem is that there are no Asgard High Council ships anymore that we know of. The Asgard could still travel between galaxies in minutes as of Season 9 as Kvasir turned up after Oddessy arived at P3Y 229 and Korolev was a matter of hours behind. Therefore if the Asgard dispatched a ship ASAP it obviosly did'nt take very long to get to P4Y 229 :)--Jnadreth (talk) (Contribs) 22:34, December 21, 2009 (UTC)

Asgard ships couldn't reach the destiny. You're assuming that the FTL drive is rubbish, but for all we know it's faster than the fastest hyperdrives. Sman789 (talk) (Contribs) 23:30, December 21, 2009 (UTC)

How do you know the Asgard could not reach the Destiny? They got from Othala to Cimmeria in minutes!!! Their hyperdrives are clearly in the Billions xC as this wiki says about crossing galaxies in hours at the least...which as I have calculated based on a 4 hour trip across 3 million light years would be 6,574,500,000xC. I never assumed the FTL was rubbish....its millions of years old. If it was the fastest engine ever then why did it take millions of years to get were it is now a few billion light years away :P...Ha'taks take hundreds of years to get between galaxies :P Unless the series shows that Destiny can travel faster which it might do when in galactic voids between galaxies which I predict it might...thousand times light speed is the best it can do.

Really, really, really rough estimate

Using the facts found on this wiki we known only two things about the Destiny's speed.

A) It was launched 50 million years ago.
B) It has travelled several billion light years.

This is all we know, there is nothing more, so let us calculate/speculate.

1) What does "several" mean? Let's say 50. That way we get a nice 1:1000 ratio. (Officaly several means "a number more than two but not very many")
2) Distance between galaxies? let's say 5 million light years. Distance between Milky way and pegasus is 3 million light years. The distancw between Milky way and the Replicator galaxy (seen in Exodus) is 4 million light years. So 5 could be a rough avagare, considering that the distance between galaxies include the void and the galaxy itself.
3) If Destiny traveled 50 billion light years in 50 million years. Destiny's speed would be 1000 light years in 1 year.

Now let's take the same absurd interpitation that "several" means 50, and calculate a 304's speed.

1) 3 million light years takes 18 days, if everything is going smoothly. This means that 5 million light years takes 30 days. Multiply that by 10000 and you get 300000 days or 820 years. So 82 years in hyperspace gets you to Destiny, even if we add 4180 years of refueling, the Destiny would still be over 50 thousand times slower than a 304.

Something is realy wrong here.

A) The distance, that Destiny has travelled has to be something between 3 and "not very many", so about 10. This irrefutable.
B) It was launched much, much later than 50 million light years ago. This is wrong.
C) The FTL drive broke very, very, very early. This is possible. --Uriel718 (talk) (Contribs) 15:51, March 4, 2010 (UTC)

Lets leave the speculations until we hear more about the drive's mechanism, speed & capabilities. Then we can start make some real speculations. --Railgun Out! 04:53, March 21, 2010 (UTC)

Warp-Drive

As far as I can tell it seems to work like the warp-dive in startrek; a subspace field is projected around the ship which allows the ships sublight engines to project the vessel to faster than light speeds. Awar 11:12, March 22, 2010 (UTC)

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