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Dark Zarak wrote:Maybe it weighed very little, even in it's large mode. They built the Hoover Dam around it, right? Maybe they never actually moved it at all.
If that were the case it'd be more than likely that that asteroid that hit it in outer space in the intro would have destroyed it, instead of the opposite happening. No the writers said they wanted to touch on mass-shifting in the first movie, but thought that if they overused it & actually used it for a couple of robots, people wouldn't be able to suspend their disbelief enough to enjoy the movie.TheKnightShift wrote:The closest analogy I've been able to come up with how the All Spark did that, is how the Sun is going to expand over the course of the next few billion years as it expends its hydrogen, and goes from the compact size that it is now to where it's big enough to (it is thought) engulf the orbits of Mercury, Venus and Earth (gulp!). Even though it will have much the same mass throughout the whole time.
So maybe the All Spark keeps the same mass but it's just "spread out" a bit. In which case the "large mode" for the All Spark really does weigh as much as the smaller size.
An_de wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Maybe it weighed very little, even in it's large mode. They built the Hoover Dam around it, right? Maybe they never actually moved it at all.
When the Cube got small, Sam had no trouble carrying it.
Dark Zarak wrote:An_de wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Maybe it weighed very little, even in it's large mode. They built the Hoover Dam around it, right? Maybe they never actually moved it at all.
When the Cube got small, Sam had no trouble carrying it.
You don't get my point.
I'm saying it weighs very little regardless of its size. So of course Sam had no trouble carrying it.
I dunno man, we don't know what the All Spark is made of exactly: there are materials we can produce on Earth right now that have low mass but some amazing properties, like tensile strength, resistance to high temperatures etc. Aerogel comes to mind. There's no telling how much cooler stuff wound up being created "out there" in the Transformers' section of spaceNemesis Cyberplex wrote:If that were the case it'd be more than likely that that asteroid that hit it in outer space in the intro would have destroyed it, instead of the opposite happening. No the writers said they wanted to touch on mass-shifting in the first movie, but thought that if they overused it & actually used it for a couple of robots, people wouldn't be able to suspend their disbelief enough to enjoy the movie.
TheKnightShift wrote:I dunno man, we don't know what the All Spark is made of exactly: there are materials we can produce on Earth right now that have low mass but some amazing properties, like tensile strength, resistance to high temperatures etc. Aerogel comes to mind. There's no telling how much cooler stuff wound up being created "out there" in the Transformers' section of spaceNemesis Cyberplex wrote:If that were the case it'd be more than likely that that asteroid that hit it in outer space in the intro would have destroyed it, instead of the opposite happening. No the writers said they wanted to touch on mass-shifting in the first movie, but thought that if they overused it & actually used it for a couple of robots, people wouldn't be able to suspend their disbelief enough to enjoy the movie.
Auto Bot wrote:Why didn't it travel to Earth in the small mode? It's much easier to move, and use much less energy to go the distance.
Robinson wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Why didn't it travel to Earth in the small mode? It's much easier to move, and use much less energy to go the distance.
In space once you start moving you stay moving, no matter how big or small you are. The cube just floated through space so it wasnt expending energy at all, it was just drifting and crash landed on earth because earth was in its way.
Robinson wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Why didn't it travel to Earth in the small mode? It's much easier to move, and use much less energy to go the distance.
In space once you start moving you stay moving, no matter how big or small you are. The cube just floated through space so it wasnt expending energy at all, it was just drifting and crash landed on earth because earth was in its way.
Nemesis Cyberplex wrote:If that were the case it'd be more than likely that that asteroid that hit it in outer space in the intro would have destroyed it, instead of the opposite happening. No the writers said they wanted to touch on mass-shifting in the first movie, but thought that if they overused it & actually used it for a couple of robots, people wouldn't be able to suspend their disbelief enough to enjoy the movie.TheKnightShift wrote:The closest analogy I've been able to come up with how the All Spark did that, is how the Sun is going to expand over the course of the next few billion years as it expends its hydrogen, and goes from the compact size that it is now to where it's big enough to (it is thought) engulf the orbits of Mercury, Venus and Earth (gulp!). Even though it will have much the same mass throughout the whole time.
So maybe the All Spark keeps the same mass but it's just "spread out" a bit. In which case the "large mode" for the All Spark really does weigh as much as the smaller size.
Mykltron wrote:Surely it's not THAT hard to train monkeys... Is it? Maybe the monkeys were trained by monkeys who hadn't been trained properly.
G1Blaster wrote:Saying an album is ten times better than St. Anger is like saying you'd rather be hit in the head with a bat instead of kicked in the nuts.
Auto Bot wrote:Robinson wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Why didn't it travel to Earth in the small mode? It's much easier to move, and use much less energy to go the distance.
In space once you start moving you stay moving, no matter how big or small you are. The cube just floated through space so it wasnt expending energy at all, it was just drifting and crash landed on earth because earth was in its way.
We have to assume it's accelerating, and changing vectors. Otherwise, it wouldn't be a mystery to the Cybertronians to finding it. Just follow the path of the initial launch. And you'll get it in no time. But it took them a long time, and a very wide (spanning galaxies) search space.
Robinson wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Robinson wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Why didn't it travel to Earth in the small mode? It's much easier to move, and use much less energy to go the distance.
In space once you start moving you stay moving, no matter how big or small you are. The cube just floated through space so it wasnt expending energy at all, it was just drifting and crash landed on earth because earth was in its way.
We have to assume it's accelerating, and changing vectors. Otherwise, it wouldn't be a mystery to the Cybertronians to finding it. Just follow the path of the initial launch. And you'll get it in no time. But it took them a long time, and a very wide (spanning galaxies) search space.
They couldnt ust follow the initial launch because as it showed in the intro that it was bouncing off of objects(meteors) so those would alter the initial trajectory enough to make it harder to track.
Auto Bot wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:An_de wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Maybe it weighed very little, even in it's large mode. They built the Hoover Dam around it, right? Maybe they never actually moved it at all.
When the Cube got small, Sam had no trouble carrying it.
You don't get my point.
I'm saying it weighs very little regardless of its size. So of course Sam had no trouble carrying it.
But it was so heavy in large mode that the S7 guys can't move it.
Dark Zarak wrote:Auto Bot wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:An_de wrote:Dark Zarak wrote:Maybe it weighed very little, even in it's large mode. They built the Hoover Dam around it, right? Maybe they never actually moved it at all.
When the Cube got small, Sam had no trouble carrying it.
You don't get my point.
I'm saying it weighs very little regardless of its size. So of course Sam had no trouble carrying it.
But it was so heavy in large mode that the S7 guys can't move it.
It said that in the movie?
Well then it's Bay hypocrisy plain and simple. We got a movie directed by a guy who hates TF's.
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