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Is somebody here willing to apply this please? As long as it fulfills the requirements mentioned above that is.Thank you for the information.
As long as they have each been evaluated and accepted by at least two of our calc group members, they should probably be fine to add.
It seems like this needs to be handled as well.
As the guy who calced the feat, I'm pretty sure that's because those guys are doing much more than just slamming the door open. You can't just insinuate that this nobbly thing that is the latch is stronger than any part of the door (which is made of the same material: brass) or even the entire door:
In most cases the thing that breaks is the wood on the door jamb in front of the latch, as shown in those images. We're talking about a tiny sliver of wood reinforced by a thin strike plate which is usually held in place by short screws. This page here describes the other items that break when a door is kicked open, and it's generally not the actual bolt that breaks. This video also shows a door kicked in.As the guy who calced the feat, I'm pretty sure that's because those guys are doing much more than just slamming the door open. You can't just insinuate that this nobbly thing that is the latch is stronger than any part of the door (which is made of the same material: brass) or even the entire door:
Especially when there is an example of the feat where literally only the latch would have been destroyed by the slam:
Refer to thisIs there a calc for pulverizing a human (turning them into a blood spray)?
I'm aware of that one, it would definitely be higher than that, i was just asking if there was a calc for pulverizing humans done somewhere. If it wasn't then it should a good one to include for the page
Thank you for helping out.
Agreed. That seems very unreliable.I don't know about using Quora as a source admittedly, unless it features an actual study (though it doesn't)
I think that this seems like a good idea.I'm hijacking this post for a related question.
Would it be possible to expand the Throwing a Person to the Horizon calc to also feature the LS required to do so? As of now, it assumes the target is struck by a blow, but it's pretty common to have characters achieving this trope with a physical throw.
I believe so, yeahI'm hijacking this post for a related question.
Would it be possible to expand the Throwing a Person to the Horizon calc to also feature the LS required to do so? As of now, it assumes the target is struck by a blow, but it's pretty common to have characters achieving this trope with a physical throw.
Yeah it'd be pretty simple you're just using a length for the work to get the LSI'm hijacking this post for a related question.
Would it be possible to expand the Throwing a Person to the Horizon calc to also feature the LS required to do so? As of now, it assumes the target is struck by a blow, but it's pretty common to have characters achieving this trope with a physical throw.
No? Throwing your average joe the horizon should be Class MWouldn't this just be Average Human class since we're using the average weight of a human (70 kilograms)? Or are we looking to expand it based upon the characters' weights & the speed they're thrown at?
When did you see an average human throw another human to the horizon .Wouldn't this just be Average Human class since we're using the average weight of a human (70 kilograms)? Or are we looking to expand it based upon the characters' weights & the speed they're thrown at?
I do it every day, it should be an Atom level+ feat.When did you see an average human throw another human to the horizon .
Wait, really? Where's the formula for this?No? Throwing your average joe the horizon should be Class M
We already have the energy in joules just get the work by dividing the body/arm movement of the throwWait, really? Where's the formula for this?
Using 1.7m average height in the blog and this human proportions calculator you get an arm length of 0.8 and you're typing throwing at a 45 degree angle so you get 0.628319m arm movementI'm hijacking this post for a related question.
Would it be possible to expand the Throwing a Person to the Horizon calc to also feature the LS required to do so? As of now, it assumes the target is struck by a blow, but it's pretty common to have characters achieving this trope with a physical throw.
We already have the energy in joules just get the work by dividing the body/arm movement of the throw
Joules/distance for the work
Oh yeah... I forgot about that. Should we add this to the page, then?Using 1.7m average height in the blog and this human proportions calculator you get an arm length of 0.8 and you're typing throwing at a 45 degree angle so you get 0.628319m arm movement
Normal human vision:
583,690 Joules / 0.628319m = 94728.657901kg or 94.72866 Metric Tons (Class 100)
Peak human vision:
1.4592e6 Joules / 0.628319m = 236817.58807kg or 236.81758807 Metric Tons (Class K)
Superhuman vision:
2.9184e6 Joules / 0.628319m = 473635.17511kg or 473.635175 Metric Tons (Class K)
coulda sworn this would be Class M but here we are
Yes. For safety reasons we need at least two calc group members evaluating and accepting a calculation before it can be added to our standard feats page though, and if a new calculation is suggested to replace a previous identical feat there, both calculations need to be evaluated in a calc group forum discussion thread as usual.I admittedly don't know how the procedure to add calcs to the page works, but if we provide a proper evaluation in this thread or a blog for the calc up here then it should be fine, I guess?
Using 1.7m average height in the blog and this human proportions calculator you get an arm length of 0.8 and you're typing throwing at a 45 degree angle so you get 0.628319m arm movement
Normal human vision:
583,690 Joules / 0.628319m = 94728.657901kg or 94.72866 Metric Tons (Class 100)
Peak human vision:
1.4592e6 Joules / 0.628319m = 236817.58807kg or 236.81758807 Metric Tons (Class K)
Superhuman vision:
2.9184e6 Joules / 0.628319m = 473635.17511kg or 473.635175 Metric Tons (Class K)
coulda sworn this would be Class M but here we are
I admittedly don't know how the procedure to add calcs to the page works, but if we provide a proper evaluation in this thread or a blog for the calc up here then it should be fine, I guess?
Well, it looks like Flashlight already did a calc regarding the force needed to do it here, but there doesn't seem to be many evaluations for it. So, which one seems to be the most accurate?Yes. For safety reasons we need at least two calc group members evaluating and accepting a calculation before it can be added to our standard feats page though, and if a new calculation is suggested to replace a previous identical feat there, both calculations need to be evaluated in a calc group forum discussion thread as usual.
They're done via different methods, though I think Dale's results make maybe a bit more sense.So, which one seems to be the most accurate?
I think it's a hard press myself. Dale's calc basically just ran the KE backwards while I used kinematics equations for my result, but on reflection, would it really take an arm 0.15 seconds to accelerate to the speed needed?Well, it looks like Flashlight already did a calc regarding the force needed to do it here, but there doesn't seem to be many evaluations for it. So, which one seems to be the most accurate?
They're done via different methods, though I think Dale's results make maybe a bit more sense.
Okay, so what's the consensus for this now? Have we reached a conclusion yet?I think it's a hard press myself. Dale's calc basically just ran the KE backwards while I used kinematics equations for my result, but on reflection, would it really take an arm 0.15 seconds to accelerate to the speed needed?
I think unless there's a better way to calc this, we go with Dale's calc.Okay, so what's the consensus for this now? Have we reached a conclusion yet?
Alright, then I guess that's settled.I think unless there's a better way to calc this, we go with Dale's calc.
Do we also know what the level of speed required to do this is?Using 1.7m average height in the blog and this human proportions calculator you get an arm length of 0.8 and you're typing throwing at a 45 degree angle so you get 0.628319m arm movement
Normal human vision:
583,690 Joules / 0.628319m = 94728.657901kg or 94.72866 Metric Tons (Class 100)
Peak human vision:
1.4592e6 Joules / 0.628319m = 236817.58807kg or 236.81758807 Metric Tons (Class K)
Superhuman vision:
2.9184e6 Joules / 0.628319m = 473635.17511kg or 473.635175 Metric Tons (Class K)
coulda sworn this would be Class M but here we are
Yes; it's the same speed listed in the original feat.Alright, then I guess that's settled.
Do we also know what the level of speed required to do this is?
You mean right here [in bold]?Yes; it's the same speed listed in the original feat.