How did the Super Star Destroyer Executor get destroyed exactly?Star Wars RotJ: why was the Executor chosen...
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How did the Super Star Destroyer Executor get destroyed exactly?
Star Wars RotJ: why was the Executor chosen as a target?Are Rebel pilots trained to conduct suicide runs?How big is the Death Star compared to the ExecutorHas a Star Destroyer ever actually destroyed a Star?Who is left to fight in Star Wars episodes 8 onwards?Did Rey's flight of the Millennium Falcon conflict with known Super Star Destroyer schematics?How did the crash disable the star destroyer?How big is Snoke's command ship compared to a Super Star Destroyer?Star Wars Eclipse-Class Super Star DestroyerWhy isn't Vader in the Super Star Destroyer Executor at the beginning of Return of the Jedi?
This is what happens to the Super Star Destoyer Executor in RotJ
- All fire is concentarted on the Super Star Destroyer Executor.
- Only 2 A-wings destory the bridge deflector shields
- And before forward weapons are activated a third A-wing crashes into the SSD bridge which explodes from all sides.
- And then the 19.000 meter long craft sinks like a dart into the Death Star, destroying it completely.
How and why? I always thought this ship a total useless part of the movies because it really doesn't show any threat anywhere, other to be big. And while it is part of the final battle it's defeated in the most easiest way possible.
star-wars
add a comment |
This is what happens to the Super Star Destoyer Executor in RotJ
- All fire is concentarted on the Super Star Destroyer Executor.
- Only 2 A-wings destory the bridge deflector shields
- And before forward weapons are activated a third A-wing crashes into the SSD bridge which explodes from all sides.
- And then the 19.000 meter long craft sinks like a dart into the Death Star, destroying it completely.
How and why? I always thought this ship a total useless part of the movies because it really doesn't show any threat anywhere, other to be big. And while it is part of the final battle it's defeated in the most easiest way possible.
star-wars
2
My car weighs a ton and is nearly 5 metres long. If the steering wheel catches fire while I'm driving, I'm gonna crash.
– Valorum
5 hours ago
@Valorum: Sure, but the art is for the driver to achieve the following, right before burning to ashes: To turn and lock the steering wheel in such a way that the car does a 90° turn, followed by a movement straight ahead, and thereby hit the one big obstacle that should preferrably be evaded for safety reasons. (In case there are usually no death stars in the area you usually drive around in, you may want to imagine a more mundane obstacle.)
– O. R. Mapper
4 hours ago
add a comment |
This is what happens to the Super Star Destoyer Executor in RotJ
- All fire is concentarted on the Super Star Destroyer Executor.
- Only 2 A-wings destory the bridge deflector shields
- And before forward weapons are activated a third A-wing crashes into the SSD bridge which explodes from all sides.
- And then the 19.000 meter long craft sinks like a dart into the Death Star, destroying it completely.
How and why? I always thought this ship a total useless part of the movies because it really doesn't show any threat anywhere, other to be big. And while it is part of the final battle it's defeated in the most easiest way possible.
star-wars
This is what happens to the Super Star Destoyer Executor in RotJ
- All fire is concentarted on the Super Star Destroyer Executor.
- Only 2 A-wings destory the bridge deflector shields
- And before forward weapons are activated a third A-wing crashes into the SSD bridge which explodes from all sides.
- And then the 19.000 meter long craft sinks like a dart into the Death Star, destroying it completely.
How and why? I always thought this ship a total useless part of the movies because it really doesn't show any threat anywhere, other to be big. And while it is part of the final battle it's defeated in the most easiest way possible.
star-wars
star-wars
edited 5 hours ago
Valorum
413k11230093230
413k11230093230
asked 6 hours ago
KasperKasper
25237
25237
2
My car weighs a ton and is nearly 5 metres long. If the steering wheel catches fire while I'm driving, I'm gonna crash.
– Valorum
5 hours ago
@Valorum: Sure, but the art is for the driver to achieve the following, right before burning to ashes: To turn and lock the steering wheel in such a way that the car does a 90° turn, followed by a movement straight ahead, and thereby hit the one big obstacle that should preferrably be evaded for safety reasons. (In case there are usually no death stars in the area you usually drive around in, you may want to imagine a more mundane obstacle.)
– O. R. Mapper
4 hours ago
add a comment |
2
My car weighs a ton and is nearly 5 metres long. If the steering wheel catches fire while I'm driving, I'm gonna crash.
– Valorum
5 hours ago
@Valorum: Sure, but the art is for the driver to achieve the following, right before burning to ashes: To turn and lock the steering wheel in such a way that the car does a 90° turn, followed by a movement straight ahead, and thereby hit the one big obstacle that should preferrably be evaded for safety reasons. (In case there are usually no death stars in the area you usually drive around in, you may want to imagine a more mundane obstacle.)
– O. R. Mapper
4 hours ago
2
2
My car weighs a ton and is nearly 5 metres long. If the steering wheel catches fire while I'm driving, I'm gonna crash.
– Valorum
5 hours ago
My car weighs a ton and is nearly 5 metres long. If the steering wheel catches fire while I'm driving, I'm gonna crash.
– Valorum
5 hours ago
@Valorum: Sure, but the art is for the driver to achieve the following, right before burning to ashes: To turn and lock the steering wheel in such a way that the car does a 90° turn, followed by a movement straight ahead, and thereby hit the one big obstacle that should preferrably be evaded for safety reasons. (In case there are usually no death stars in the area you usually drive around in, you may want to imagine a more mundane obstacle.)
– O. R. Mapper
4 hours ago
@Valorum: Sure, but the art is for the driver to achieve the following, right before burning to ashes: To turn and lock the steering wheel in such a way that the car does a 90° turn, followed by a movement straight ahead, and thereby hit the one big obstacle that should preferrably be evaded for safety reasons. (In case there are usually no death stars in the area you usually drive around in, you may want to imagine a more mundane obstacle.)
– O. R. Mapper
4 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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The film's official novelisation indicates that a mixture of torpedo fire (and the kamikaze A-Wing) set off a chain reaction of explosions, starting at the bridge but spreading to the mid-section of the ship.
The bridge was hit, with kaleidoscopic results. A rapid chain reaction
got set off, from power station to power station along the middle
third of the huge Destroyer, producing a dazzling rainbow of
explosions that buckled the ship at right angles, and started it
spinning like a pinwheel toward the Death Star.
The junior novelisation also mentions that the intensive fire knocked out the secondary control systems and that the ship was pulled into the Death Star as a result of its own gravity.
The A-wing smashed into the Executor’s bridge and exploded, causing
the entire ship to veer off course. Damage-control crews were unable
to seize command using the auxiliary control centers, and the Executor
was dragged into the Death Star’s gravitational field.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The film's official novelisation indicates that a mixture of torpedo fire (and the kamikaze A-Wing) set off a chain reaction of explosions, starting at the bridge but spreading to the mid-section of the ship.
The bridge was hit, with kaleidoscopic results. A rapid chain reaction
got set off, from power station to power station along the middle
third of the huge Destroyer, producing a dazzling rainbow of
explosions that buckled the ship at right angles, and started it
spinning like a pinwheel toward the Death Star.
The junior novelisation also mentions that the intensive fire knocked out the secondary control systems and that the ship was pulled into the Death Star as a result of its own gravity.
The A-wing smashed into the Executor’s bridge and exploded, causing
the entire ship to veer off course. Damage-control crews were unable
to seize command using the auxiliary control centers, and the Executor
was dragged into the Death Star’s gravitational field.
add a comment |
The film's official novelisation indicates that a mixture of torpedo fire (and the kamikaze A-Wing) set off a chain reaction of explosions, starting at the bridge but spreading to the mid-section of the ship.
The bridge was hit, with kaleidoscopic results. A rapid chain reaction
got set off, from power station to power station along the middle
third of the huge Destroyer, producing a dazzling rainbow of
explosions that buckled the ship at right angles, and started it
spinning like a pinwheel toward the Death Star.
The junior novelisation also mentions that the intensive fire knocked out the secondary control systems and that the ship was pulled into the Death Star as a result of its own gravity.
The A-wing smashed into the Executor’s bridge and exploded, causing
the entire ship to veer off course. Damage-control crews were unable
to seize command using the auxiliary control centers, and the Executor
was dragged into the Death Star’s gravitational field.
add a comment |
The film's official novelisation indicates that a mixture of torpedo fire (and the kamikaze A-Wing) set off a chain reaction of explosions, starting at the bridge but spreading to the mid-section of the ship.
The bridge was hit, with kaleidoscopic results. A rapid chain reaction
got set off, from power station to power station along the middle
third of the huge Destroyer, producing a dazzling rainbow of
explosions that buckled the ship at right angles, and started it
spinning like a pinwheel toward the Death Star.
The junior novelisation also mentions that the intensive fire knocked out the secondary control systems and that the ship was pulled into the Death Star as a result of its own gravity.
The A-wing smashed into the Executor’s bridge and exploded, causing
the entire ship to veer off course. Damage-control crews were unable
to seize command using the auxiliary control centers, and the Executor
was dragged into the Death Star’s gravitational field.
The film's official novelisation indicates that a mixture of torpedo fire (and the kamikaze A-Wing) set off a chain reaction of explosions, starting at the bridge but spreading to the mid-section of the ship.
The bridge was hit, with kaleidoscopic results. A rapid chain reaction
got set off, from power station to power station along the middle
third of the huge Destroyer, producing a dazzling rainbow of
explosions that buckled the ship at right angles, and started it
spinning like a pinwheel toward the Death Star.
The junior novelisation also mentions that the intensive fire knocked out the secondary control systems and that the ship was pulled into the Death Star as a result of its own gravity.
The A-wing smashed into the Executor’s bridge and exploded, causing
the entire ship to veer off course. Damage-control crews were unable
to seize command using the auxiliary control centers, and the Executor
was dragged into the Death Star’s gravitational field.
answered 5 hours ago
ValorumValorum
413k11230093230
413k11230093230
add a comment |
add a comment |
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2
My car weighs a ton and is nearly 5 metres long. If the steering wheel catches fire while I'm driving, I'm gonna crash.
– Valorum
5 hours ago
@Valorum: Sure, but the art is for the driver to achieve the following, right before burning to ashes: To turn and lock the steering wheel in such a way that the car does a 90° turn, followed by a movement straight ahead, and thereby hit the one big obstacle that should preferrably be evaded for safety reasons. (In case there are usually no death stars in the area you usually drive around in, you may want to imagine a more mundane obstacle.)
– O. R. Mapper
4 hours ago