creator
Team Buster Ledger
It's time for Powergrids 2.0
Posts: 1,217
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Post by creator on Mar 31, 2013 23:45:15 GMT -5
Now... Apply those same calculations for his durability feats. This was a small black hole too. I think I remember him actually being within a black hole as well. The forces generated by one at least big enough to contain his entire body must be staggering. Might make an endurance feat too since he was able to operate at certain levels while under extreme strain... though I am not sure how that would be rated. Do you mean this one? Attachments:
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Post by Erik-El on Mar 31, 2013 23:54:14 GMT -5
No. It was a different one where reality was warping within the black hole and it caused after-images of Superman which looked like he had two heads for some scenes, likely because he was moving and a similar effect was shown with his arm movements.
He flew at light speed within the black hole and was still unable to escape it's pull and some guy was just standing there with him.
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Post by Erik-El on Apr 1, 2013 0:33:09 GMT -5
Found it.
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Post by Erik-El on Apr 1, 2013 0:33:55 GMT -5
It was a 'double black hole'. Whatever that means.
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creator
Team Buster Ledger
It's time for Powergrids 2.0
Posts: 1,217
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Post by creator on Apr 1, 2013 22:04:40 GMT -5
Was he fully in the black hole or at the event horizon? I ask this because it has serious implications for the forces he felt.
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Post by Erik-El on Apr 1, 2013 22:24:39 GMT -5
Was he fully in the black hole or at the event horizon? I ask this because it has serious implications for the forces he felt. I posted them in the durability thread since I thought they were more relevant there.
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creator
Team Buster Ledger
It's time for Powergrids 2.0
Posts: 1,217
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Post by creator on Apr 1, 2013 23:43:41 GMT -5
Was he fully in the black hole or at the event horizon? I ask this because it has serious implications for the forces he felt. I posted them in the durability thread since I thought they were more relevant there. Yeah, I saw them after I posted here....doh!
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Post by jakefury on Apr 22, 2013 15:59:40 GMT -5
Finally got to the feat where Mark (Invincible) lifts 400 tons. Pretty impressive!
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creator
Team Buster Ledger
It's time for Powergrids 2.0
Posts: 1,217
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Post by creator on Apr 23, 2013 22:45:39 GMT -5
Finally got to the feat where Mark (Invincible) lifts 400 tons. Pretty impressive! Here's an earlier posting I made I had forgotten that we already had Invincible at Rank 13 based on the 400 tonne feat. Hunting around, I found this respect thread for Invincible www.narutoforums.com/showthread.php?t=481535It shows some strength feats. The one were he lifts the pillar in o place is certainly way above 400 tonnes. Now the calculations a user in that thread I don't trust so I redid them myself. The column is approx 16 times higher (to the lower edge of the taper) taller than Mark. If Mark is 6' tall, this would make the column 96' high. The diameter of the column is more difficult to calculate. It looks like we might be seeing approx 50% of the diameter of the column. That would mean the diameter would be approx 90'. The column looks stone like and so an average density for many stones is 2.6 tonnes per cubic meter. A quick calc says that the column as a straight line column to the lower edge of the top taper only is 17,782 cubic meters volume. Therefore the tonnage of a stone column of I molar dimensions would be at least 46,000+ tonnes. Which would equate to a rank 16 feat.
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Post by Erik-El on Apr 23, 2013 23:02:01 GMT -5
Finally got to the feat where Mark (Invincible) lifts 400 tons. Pretty impressive! Here's an earlier posting I made I had forgotten that we already had Invincible at Rank 13 based on the 400 tonne feat. Hunting around, I found this respect thread for Invincible www.narutoforums.com/showthread.php?t=481535It shows some strength feats. The one were he lifts the pillar in o place is certainly way above 400 tonnes. Now the calculations a user in that thread I don't trust so I redid them myself. The column is approx 16 times higher (to the lower edge of the taper) taller than Mark. If Mark is 6' tall, this would make the column 96' high. The diameter of the column is more difficult to calculate. It looks like we might be seeing approx 50% of the diameter of the column. That would mean the diameter would be approx 90'. The column looks stone like and so an average density for many stones is 2.6 tonnes per cubic meter. A quick calc says that the column as a straight line column to the lower edge of the top taper only is 17,782 cubic meters volume. Therefore the tonnage of a stone column of I molar dimensions would be at least 46,000+ tonnes. Which would equate to a rank 16 feat. That is a significant jump. With a difference that great, about how much do we equate to the writer just not knowing that feat was as sizable as it was and just made a mistake?
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Post by jakefury on Apr 24, 2013 13:49:50 GMT -5
I think the writer just made a huge mistake. In the series chronology, the feat with the stone column was way before the 400 ton feat.
Also, at the point where he lifted the stone column he wasn't actively working to enhance his abilities per his father's advice.
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creator
Team Buster Ledger
It's time for Powergrids 2.0
Posts: 1,217
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Post by creator on Apr 26, 2013 8:01:02 GMT -5
I tend to think the writer had no concept of just how high this feat was.
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Post by jakefury on Apr 26, 2013 8:58:28 GMT -5
Probably not, he could always backtrack and say the gravity on that alien planet was vastly different from ours or something.
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