As an aside... TOS implied very heavily that the dilithium crystals were centrally involved in the energy conversion process. I believe the early writers took the idea for thermoelectric crystal energy converters which were being designed for NASA space probes and satellites with onboard plutonium or cesium decay reactors and extrapolated from that for their designs for the Enterprise power system. Whenever the "dilithium converter assembly" was damaged or otherwise rendered inoperative, or crystals were physically removed from the system, it became impossible to draw power for the warp drive and other main systems.Darth Wong wrote:Who knows? There are a lot of unknowns when discussing imaginary technology after all. For all we know, the reactor itself is not the problem and it's the energy conversion equipment which is the real problem. After all, nobody ever talks about how you're supposed to efficiently get the energy out of a M/AM reaction in a sealed chamber and convert it into more useful forms. People assume that the whole system looks like this:Though to bring up engines, size of a warp drive assembly may determine how it's effectiveness works. Wouldn't reactor size determine power output as well?
M/AM reaction -> Energy release -> Profit!
It must be much more complex than that. In modern nuclear power plants, the reactor is actually miniscule compared to the entire plant. Most of the bulk is taken up by support equipment.
On the other hand, the TNG writers ignored this altogether and turned dilithium into a substance which moderated M/AM reactions but forgot all about figuring out the necessary step of somehow turning the raw thermal output of the reactor into usable power. I don't even understand why anybody (David Gerrold or D.C. Fontana or maybe Roddenberry...) came up with the idea of using a material "moderator" in antimatter fusion to begin with when it's far more practical to control the reaction rate just by controlling the fuel flow into the intermix chamber.