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#376 |
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Basically, the whole base, not just the room, contrary to high's claim, could withstand a strike. High, I was certainly not running into semantics. You claimed that the room alone could withstand a nuke. I asked what you understood by the room, exactly. A room is, in general, at least three straight walls, generally four, a floor and a ceiling. This is a volume. A fucking volume can't withstand a nuke. It's like saying the atmosphere can withstand a nuke. This is retarded. Therefore, it can only refer to the structure of the room, the walls, floor and ceiling. Thusly, I ask you how think you think the walls are, and where the walls of the room actually start and end. Or are you saying that if a 80 MT nuke detonated inside this room, the room would still be intact?
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#377 | ||||
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All you've managed to do ignore it, and repeat your retarded interpretation just below. Quote:
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#378 |
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Oragahn, I remember reading that part in The Fall of Reach, and it is saying that if the outside portion of the room, essentially the outside part of the walls, ceiling, and floor, was directly hit by an 80 megaton nuke the room would survive the blast.
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#379 | |
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Sorry to necro this. After reading Hig's post again, his claims seems to be that if you take two rooms, separated by a wall, and detonated a 80 MT nuke in one room, the lady in the other room would be safe, because the room can withstand a standard nuke detonation.
I also reconsidered the excerpt provided by SE: Quote:
__________________
. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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#380 | |
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'The room where she now stood'. This obviously refers to, well, the room in which she is standing, not the whole facility. Not that an 80 megaton EPW is enough to destroy something buried under two kilometres of granite, of course. Meaning that the statement becomes even more nonsensical when interpreted as you would. |
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#381 | ||
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Or is it that, if the nuke was detonated inside an adjacent room, the one where the woman stood would not be damaged/destroyed? (Same question from the post above, but which you ignored.) Quote:
What was the context of her thoughts? Did someone speak about an enemy firing from orbit?
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. Last edited by Mr. Oragahn; Oct 17th 2009 at 9:59pm. |
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#382 |
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The Divider of Heaven
Join Date: 1 Apr 2000
Location: Above you!
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Sorry, I'm actually with the thought of "the facility could survive a strike form outside."
Things typically don't survive to well with internal explosions.
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To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. "14579: The female MP Spartan model would, when her shields were popped, suddenly become the male Spartan model. IT’S A TRAP." |
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#383 | |
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Crazy custom title
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While I side with hig's interpretation of the Reach quote (though I forget its context), the context of the other quote in FS about CASTLE REACH (the facility in question) makes it seem more like Hasley was referring to the entire facility. You wouldn't say "could possibly withstand anything up to and including a nuke" if you have offices that can survive 80-megaton nukes. Mr. Oragahn, If I said "the Abrams he piloted could survive an RPG-7," you would take that as a statement that as an Abrams armor could survive an RPG-7 or that an Abram's armor and insides could survive an RPG-7? |
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#384 | ||
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I'll simply point out that a simulation of the detonation of 10 megatons buried nuke, inside a Golevka asteroid model (500 x 600 x 700 meters) has shown that a sphere roughly 200~250 meters wide was vaporized, and the rest of the asteroid was pulverized. Assuming we're dealing with an initial high penetration delivery system (low-hypervelocity bunker buster with a laser breaking air friction a little), and then a shaped nuke with, perhaps, the emphasis put on the production of seismic forces, then it's possible that a 80 megatons buried nuke could really prove deadly to underground installations. Now, who ever said that the base was under 2 kilometers of granite? One of the two sources speaks of a ravine, and a mountain is a cone: you'd certainly not try to destroy the underground installation by hitting the summit, but actually hitting the sides at hill level, and even try to aim for obvious entrances, so the shockwave goes really deep inside the complex. Quote:
But then, there's also the small possibility that people suffering from shock or something, while most of the tank's internals systems would not get damaged as much as our fragile meatbags would, and then the question would "just" be about finding a new crew for that tank. It all depends how far you deem the tank still operational. If a shield or a helmet is dented, but not broken, yet the wielder/wearer is knocked out, obviously the gear in question withstood the impact, but no the person. Now, the lady would clearly not think positively about the protection provided when sitting in that room if it didn't guarantee very high chances of survival.
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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http://www.ucsusa.org/nuclear_weapon...g-weapons.html "For example, an earth penetrating weapon using the 1.2 megaton B83 warhead—the highest yield weapon in the U.S. nuclear stockpile—could crush underground bunkers to a depth of about 1000 feet." Since yield scales by the third power of penetration depth (or more, since it scales by the dourth power of crater depth above 1 megaton), 80 megatons isn't enough. Considering everything else that's canonically in between, and that granite is harder than normal soil. Quote:
![]() Or is that all just bullshit and we could also assume they have magic nukes which modify the phase variance so that the blast teleports itself next to the bunker? Quote:
TFoR also says that the base is two kilometres below the mountains. No, it does not say 'two kilometres below the surface of the mountain' like you might try to claim. Anyway, there's no point in building your facility under a mountain for defence if it counts for nothing because you can just hit it from the side, unless you're severely retarded. Quote:
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Got that. I used the buried nuke case because we happened to be talking about advanced nuclear bunker buster, and although the nuke of our Reach-relevant case not be buried as deep, would still do a better job than merely detonated on the surface. And what is that equation you're talking about? Quantity and density of the mass surrounding the nuclear device matters a lot in cratering. Quote:
I happened to read an old thread, perhaps even that one, wherein someone pointed out, when talking about the pirate base and Cortana's demonstration, that insurgents had no impressive weapons, and that it was rather spectacular for the pirates to even have Archer missiles. The point being that whoever the lady had in mind when she spoke of the nuke, she clearly thought of someone, or some faction, that could threaten the UNSC. Quote:
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Secondly, since the complex could be wide, then there would likely parts of the complex that would have less mountain right above them, than some other sections. Unless the complex was built like an underground pyramid, more or less mimicing the mountain's shape Quote:
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You're sure you're not being a wanker, right here? Because, you know, you can complain about me making a reference to a simulation of a buried 10 MT nuclear device used to destroy an asteroid, which isn't perfectly relevant to our little incident, but using a 80 megatons inside an underground room, and pretending that said room would be fine... that's waaaay beyond retarded. I can think of an appropriate picture there, but it got me banned last time I used it. Hint: it featured a back and forth linear movement. I'm sorry to have to state your opinion, it seems hard to get a direct and simple answer, to simple questions, and I'm not really getting why you obtusely refuse to reply, especially since I've asked this twice now, and you managed to type two posts and still evade those questions. It's looking like you don't want to state your opinion clearly.
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. Last edited by Mr. Oragahn; Oct 18th 2009 at 7:34am. |
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#387 | ||
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More later. EDIT: Quote:
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#388 |
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The Grey Ghost.
Join Date: 1 May 2009
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No One gets Left Behind. Not going to start now. And if there was one we go back for them and bring them home. |
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#389 | ||||
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Don't even try to get SpartanElite and wellis into that. Wellis had bad memories of the quote, and SE didn't exactly give his opinion, but asked me a simple question, which I addressed honestly, although it's also good to point out that the analogy using a tank for an underground bunker room is not very good, considering that the tank is not an underground structure and therefore not surrounded by copious amounts of matter. I've covered all cases I could think of : surface impact, bunker buster, nuke inside an adjacent room, and nuke in the room. The only one I didn't cover is the case of taking the room out of the complex, along arbitrary measures of wall thickness, and then saying oh but if a nuke exploded outside of this room... which is just ironic, considering how you mocked me with your phasing nuke strawman. Just give me an answer and stop playing games. But you know what, here's the quote, as provided by l33telboi: Quote:
2 to 3 kilometers of granite, titanium-A, concrete and whatever else? Huh. Try 300 meters of hardened steel and concrete. Eventually, the layout would be similar. Rather amusing, in light of your claim that we had to understand that the lady's thoughts were about the case where the nuke would be detonated just outside the room! Aside from the already ludicrous mind bending exercice in abstraction, it would also require ignoring the clear context. You know, the one that lists all the planet's defenses, and the thickness and composition of the complex's armour between the surface and its rooms... in case it were hit hard. Ah, the memories, they're all resurfacing now. I remember why I grabbed you on that arbitrary wall and ceiling thickness of yours. Before my necro, the thread pretty much ended with you talking nonsense, pages later after l33telboi had already called you on your extravagant claim in post #68. I'll again point to Clavian's post, which included info about Archer missiles: Quote:
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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Most nuclear tests are done around soil or lighter rock, so it could, in fact, be conservative. Quote:
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No offense, but if your English is this bad, you shouldn't really be posting on an English-based forum so that other people literally have to babysit you when you don't understand. Quote:
The room she is standing in is probably surrounded by other rooms (you know, what often happens in a building), and hence the boundary of that room is defined by the walls it has. In any case, there is a clear delineation between the walls of the room that were made and placed there, and anything else, be it the air of the next room, or the rock surrounding the complex. Quote:
"Castle was a massive complex, two thousand meters below the granite protection of the Highland Mountains" Even if you did believe that omission was disproof of existence, the other quote comes from First Strike which is newer, and hence higher canon. And no, 'Eventually, the layout would be similar' isn't considered valid a valid argument in proper English - it has to make sense first. Which, of course, renders the other paragraph nonsensical. However, feel free to try again, with proper English this time. Keeping in mind that the word 'same' does not mean the same thing as the word 'similar'. Quote:
Yes, it really makes sense that a missile that ships commonly carry in the hundreds can kill everything else in a single shot, right? And that Covenant ships can take hundreds of these missiles without shields, yet UNSC ships die to one? I am aware that you like to break canon in order to force through your favoured interpretation of whatever quote, but try using logic for once. Clavian has, of course, not proven that Archer missiles are sub-kiloton, ever. Last edited by higbvuyb; Oct 18th 2009 at 5:35pm. |
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Good. It's not like our science is already exploring the very near-future applications of hyper-velocity projectiles (stuff studied since the 90s or perhaps even earlier). Quote:
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Are you that pathetically craving for credits? Quote:
SE understands your point, but doesn't say he agrees. I'm yet to see him take a position. Quote:
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A nuke can be detonated against one of these walls, and the wall would stand. This is priceless. But to understand the acrobatics you're going through, we need to check those quotes, again: Quote:
Now, I got access to TFOR, so it's going to be funnier. Anatomy of a cherry pick: Quote:
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While the original quote meant the ceiling would provide protecting against a 80 MT nuke, not a mere wall can do it. But do we even know that Hasley was in Castle Reach when she thought about the 300 meters of concrete and steel above her head? A complex is a rather large ensemble of elements. Halopedia says that: "Located in the Epsilon Eridani system in FLEETCOM Sector One, the planet Reach was one of the most important headquarters for the UNSC and the main supplier of military and civilian spacecraft. HIGHCOM, FLEETCOM and the UNSC Marine Corps had headquarters on Reach, as well as many primary ONI bases, which included CASTLE Base." If this is correct, the room where Hasley was may have been another base, another section, elsewhere than in that Castle. What we can see is that Eric Nylund, writte of TFOR, was the very first one who made a distinction between the sector where Hasley gave her speech in 2517, and the base she was moved to later on, in 2552. Mystery solved, Hig's cherry picking atomized. Oh and just for the kicks: Quote:
I'm deeply sorry if 'Eventually, the layout would be similar' is too hard for you to grasp. Quote:
It's kinda sad that much of your arguments are now going to hinge on cherry picking and mockery of English usage, while you're actually doing a poor job at it. Quote:
For the reminder, "all but" can also mean "almost" or nearly. That's English, if you want to know. No one ever said that the Archer missile detonated on the surface besides. Let's just imagine, oh my, that it's a HE projectile which flies at a high speed and can penetrate those 100-200 cm of armour. Not to say, btw, that the UNSC didn't use its own ships against each other. All it had to deal with was the insurgents, people who barely could get their hands on Archer missiles. It also goes without saying that in general, UNSC ships, as per Halo books (but never seen in games) rely on PD guns to shoot down enemy projectiles. That said, considering that only largest vessels could withstand an Archer also works, although you have to realize that a smaller ship protected by only dozens of centimeters of that TA that can withstand gigatons, would laugh at the mere idea of being damaged by a sub-kiloton chemical explosive. More likely, the Archer would use its own momentum to get through the lighter plating. How could the Archers be more than sub-kiloton, or hell, say, low kilotons? Do we have... do you have any evidence that they used super-compressed chemicals, nano or not?
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. Last edited by Mr. Oragahn; Oct 19th 2009 at 6:14am. |
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major reason nukes are even designed to be earth-penetrating in the first place is to enhance the coupling effect with the ground. Most of this benefit is gained within the first three metres. Penetrating much further just defeats the purpose of using an explosive in the first place and you might as well just use a giant kinetic-kill gun. Quote:
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For example: " It wasn't marked on any map, but it was where they trained for months with Dr. Hasley." Yes, Castle is indeed where Dr Halsey was stationed during their training. Which, incidentally, began right after the 80 megaton quote. You'd also know that they even graduate from the exact same amphitheatre. You'd also know that a quote states "All other personnel had been transferred to other operations", while we also know that CPO Mendez was her program training instructor at the start and up until graduation (which is approximately when the Covenant attacked), meaning that she was moved before the initiation of the Spartan II program. The idea that she somehow operated the Spartan II program herself at some point during this time without funding and personnel is idiotic. Another quote also says "ONI's research facility" instead of "One of ONI's research facilities". Which, to anyone competent at English, means that there is one facility. You would know all of this if you were capable of reading comprehension. Quote:
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Anyway, as a reminder, "all but X" means "everything except for X", not "almost" or "nearly", which is laughably bad English. Quote:
Actually, according to the Halo ICS, destroyers are one of the most heavily armoured ship classes by Titanium-A thickness in the fleet. Quote:
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Read: "Now, who ever said that the base was under 2 kilometers of granite?" Now, going by the very paper you linked to, in lose theory, the 80 MT nuke would have the same effects as a 1600 GT nuke if detonated at a depth of 1 m, and 2,560 MT at five meters. But that's in general for yields in the kiloton range, or very close to this range. Yet: "For example, an earth penetrating weapon using the 1.2 megaton B83 warhead—the highest yield weapon in the U.S. nuclear stockpile—could crush underground bunkers to a depth of about 1000 feet." 1000 ft is 300 meters. Quote:
Now, as per the paper, the problem is the device's ability to survive the deeper penetration, since "additional depth of penetration increases ground-shock coupling". Of course, I could argue that there has never been any mention of the nuke being buried whatsoever. ![]() Quote:
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But don't feel obligated to stop in your tracks, and continue with that wank that walls of concrete could withstand a direct 80 MT nuke. ![]() Also, coming from the one who is, in essence, literally implying that Nylund couldn't make up his mind between a depth of 300 and 2000 meters, that's rather rich. Quote:
I know this is a bit hard for you to grasp, but I said "If this is correct". IF The conclusive aspect of my final commentary was solely based on the excerpts from the book. Quote:
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Same Nylund who put the "Castle" complex 2000 meters below the mountains. Quote:
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Besides, the bit about being several ONI facilities comes from Halopedia, not me. What matters is that there are facilities (plural), and they are all relevant to the project: Quote:
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Now stop embarrassing yourself with such retarded nitpicking, and try to provide proofs in favour of your über-ceiling argument for a change. Quote:
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Likely copied from here. A complicated issue, isn't it? Quote:
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__________________
. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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Anyway, the important point is that what you're proposing is a hybrid gun-nuke system, not a nuke, and thus the quote would say "direct hit from an 80-megaton nuke boosted by a hypervelocity gun" intstead of "80-megaton nuke". Quote:
As far as I am aware, these principles are taught in early education, which is why I am linking you to mostly child-focussed websites. http://books.google.com.au/books?id=...age&q=&f=false http://www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/sch...iew=activities http://sciencesquad.questacon.edu.au...g_hangers.html Quote:
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The result is: "Port launch and storage bays have been breached—fires on all decks, all sections. Primary fusion chamber is breached." An unknown amount of this damage was dealt by the Covenant energy beam. Also note that this is the Pillar of Autumn, one of the most resilient ships the UNSC has. Take that however you will. Quote:
"a ship-to ship weapon capable of crippling all but the largest vessels in the human fleet" Now, let us see what makes sense. "a ship-to ship weapon capable of crippling everything except for the largest vessels in the human fleet" Yes. "a ship-to ship weapon capable of crippling nearly the largest vessels in the human fleet" No. "a ship-to ship weapon capable of crippling almost the largest vessels in the human fleet" No. Anyway, I regularly have to put up with posts that make about as much sense as this, so I have a right to complain. And you must be doing it deliberately, because someone who's good at English would actually make sense. ![]() Quote:
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We can still speak about nuke power, destruction and such topics, they're interesting and those links won't be lost. Quote:
I was just extrapolating about the abilities of a 80 MT nuke, using the same ratios for depth presented in the paper. Quote:
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Then what matters is also the kind of casing put around the nuke. If there's a few couple of tons of material around the nuke, it is ought to cause greater cratering. Still, 300 meters of concrete and reinforced steel protecting a room (and the rest) from a 80 MT nuke detonated on the surface doesn't impress me much. Quote:
You claimed that access points were irrelevant during one of those silly nitpicks of yours. I for one never claimed that shockwaves through solid were meaningless or negligible. This is nothing short of a strawman, and a barely veiled ad hominem. Now, a solid thick seal would obviously block said airblast, but since I don't know the layout of the base, my point stands. Quote:
There is obviously not much point arguing that walls of concrete and reinforced steel could withstand a direct eighty megatons hit. Besides, you keep evading the simple fact that the ceiling is a continuous artificial assembly of materials such as concrete and reinforced steel. So you cannot pick an arbitrary thickness. It's either 300 meters or nothing. Since you don't even know how thick the walls are, you can't even argue that if some divine being pulled the room and its 300 meters thick ceiling and walls out of its bedrock, and placed it outside, and lobbed a 80 MT nuke at it, the room would survive. This fantastic premise itself would require people to understand that what was formerly considered a room, would now be a building sitting out in the open, but still coming with walls of unknown thickness, and a ceiling still 300 meters high made of concrete and reinforced steel. I'm really growing tired of that stupid scenario of yours that proves to be a thousand times more ridiculous that this former "phasing-nuke" strawman you tried to pass as an argument of mine. So until you can properly and intelligibly describe what that fancy scenario of yours is, and what we should exactly understand by a room that can withstand a direct 80 MT nuclear hit according to you, I'll consider that all you have done is trolling over several pages repeatedly, obtusely refusing to make your point clear, as simple as that, despite the great many occasions you had to do so. It is rather clear that instead of stating your point a crystal clear way, you have never even tried to explain anything. You have been dodging the question on and on. I'm just tired of your endless and fruitless merry go round. You have one post to end this. Period.
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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This means that what will hit the door on the other end of the tunnel will, unlike the original, powerful shockwave, is a much, much more gradual rise and then fall in pressure. This is compounded by massive attenuation of the shockwave which wouldn't occur so much in a rigid, elastic material like rock. Then it hits the door. Sealed or not, what shockwaves like to do when they encounter such an abrupt change in medium, is to bounce off. Which means that plenty of the shockwave is just going to be reflected backwards, while a small amount will manage to go around the door if it isn't sealed, and another small amount will be absorbed by the door and transmitted further. Last but not least is the fact that to do any real damage to the facility, the shockwave has to be transferred to the rigid structural supports. And an air-transmitted shockwave utterly fails at this because, as above, most of it just reflects off rather than being absorbed by a rigid structure. Not that this helps you at all in terms of your claims. And of course, you completely failed to understand my argument, in your naive eagerness to bleat 'strawman!'. I'm obviously providing evidence against your as-yet-unsupported claim that the shockwave will be significantly more efficiently conducted down an air tunnel than rock, not claiming that you're arguing that conduction through rock is ineffective. Pay attention. Quote:
"Reach was one of the UNSC’s largest industrial bases, ringed with high-orbit gun batteries, space docks, and a fleet of heavily-armed capital ships. On the planet’s surface were Marine and Navy Special Warfare training grounds, OCS schools," - This boils down to 'In the event of an attack, there are lots of defending UNSC forces in between to intercept the bad guys before they reach the facility' "and between her underground facilities and the surface were three hundred meters of hardened steel and concrete." - 'She works somewhere in an underground complex. Between the whole complex and the surface, there are three hundred metres of hardened steel and concrete.' "The room where she now stood could withstand a direct hit from an 80-megaton nuke." - 'If you hit the room directly with an 80-megaton nuke, it would survive'. We know that this is in context of the room, so the strike must be specific to the room. This leads to your 'the 300m ceiling is part of the room!' assertion, which is the sort of crack-fantasy required for your interpretation. Your nonsensical interpretation requires that the 300 metre thick ceiling is directly above the amphitheatre, and that this is the only way to score a direct hit (i.e., there is no way to hit the room in particular more directly). This could only occur if the entire facility consisted of just a 300m steel/concrete ceiling directly above the amphitheatre, and 0 other rooms. Otherwise, hitting the top of the facility's ceiling wouldn't be the most direct way to nuke the room, because detonating the nuke against the wall of an adjacent room would be more direct. Of course, you could keep pretending that the quote says "The facility containing the room where she now stood could withstand a direct hit from an 80-megaton nuke" or "between her room and the surface were three hundred meters of hardened steel and concrete and nothing else." or "Only the ceiling and not the other walls of the room where she now stood could withstand a direct hit from an 80-megaton nuke and also I forgot to mention that this room is directly below the 300m concrete and steel barrier", but that would just make you wrong and in denial. So, prove the necessary assumption for your argument that the amphitheatre is the only room in the facility and that it is directly below the 300m barrier. Quote:
What I'm growing really tired of is your blatant inability to understand what should be a simple comprehension exercise which everyone understands except for you, and then accusing me of 'dodging' and being 'obtuse' when all I'm stating is the literal meaning of the quote itself, and when the quote in question is so simple that it is difficult and beyond the call of duty to explain it in any simpler fashion. Quote:
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#397 | ||||||||||||||||||
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BANNED
Join Date: 3 Nov 2007
Posts: 4,490
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This would be hard to defend had the context no presented the base's defenses, passive and active, but since the author concluded his exposé by making a statement of the level of safety guaranteed, after detailing what made the base formidable in terms of defenses, it's all suddenly far more understandable and likely. It's also saner, context wise, than this bizarre mental exercise of yours. Quote:
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But, really, this is not the point that mattered. What I really wanted to get clarified was your interpretation of the excerpt, and something more substantiated than "oh but it shouldn't require any explanation you dolt." Quote:
Pretending that a room could withstand a 80 MT nuke, when we know that even before knowing anything about the Covenant, the UNSC built that part of the complex on Reach after considering that 300 meters of concrete and reinforced steel would be absolutely necessary to offer protection against any weapon the UNSC's current enemy could have, it's rather obvious that the walls of said room, built with, at best, the same materials, or poorer ones, would not survive the same nuclear detonation without just as much thickness. Say hello to your 300 meters thick ceiling and walls. Any claim to the contrary is frankly ludicrous. I mean, you're really telling me that a mere wall of concrete and reinforced steel thrown in for good measure, would withstand a point blank nuclear detonation of 80 megatons? Really? And that is not insane? Quote:
Otherwise, you can argue that the base's security has been compromised, and that a commando has infiltrated it and placed a nuclear charge close to the room, sufficiently close that it would be considered a direct hit. Of course, talking about a "hit" here is a bit funny considering that in such an operation, no nuke would have been launched. You may not speak of a hit when you have not thrown, fired, shot or launched any projectile. Generally, for nuclear attacks, it strongly implies missiles, IRBMs, MRBMs or MIRVs. It's, at the very least, not the most obvious meaning of the word. Quote:
Oh sure, you could say that the amphitheater is not just below that protection, but then, again, if the nuke blew through that super-thick protection, why should I suddenly believe that the inherently and considerably slimmer layers of floor/ceiling between each level, would be better at protecting people against a 80 MT nuke if 300 meters of hardened protective shell terribly failed? Quote:
Option 1: Would the nuke fail to penetrate the 300 meters, ALL the rooms would be safe. Option 2: Would the nuke break through, the remained of the blast if there is any, the shockwave at first, and then the accelerated debris and gravity would much likely finish the complex in a pancake fashion. Mainly because if the ceiling of the upper rooms doesn't collapse, then you can consider that the 300 meters of concrete and steel have done their job, so that's back to option 1. [quote] Quote:
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Yet, when I'm asking you to explain what are the proper conditions of that direct hit, like, what that room would really be about in your mind, how thick the walls should be, also what they should be made of, and where the nuke should be, oh the surprise! You... again... give your best shot at precisely avoiding providing any clear position on this case. Pointing to a quote and repeating that there's no need for any further explanation in a much pedantic way is not a demonstration, safe in foolery. It's fine to attack my interpretation, but failing to show how yours is superior or even makes sense is not. And your "everyone" is pretty much composed of only two individuals: Wellis and SpartanElite. (You may also want to read the first pages of this thread, and poke your head around, to see that this criticism is not exclusively mine.) Quote:
Oh fine, they have survived. However, the stuff and people inside the room... I'm afraid they're gone now. Or, the outside, as the surface of the walls/ceiling/floor that is in contact with the room's air? That's it? Claiming that the walls wouldn't even crack if a 80 MT nuke was to be detonated against them? Walls which would have no reason to be made of anything better than concrete and reinforced steel, since this was deemed enough as a protection against enemy fire? Is that your support? Jesus. And SE's was just something different, but not even better: an analogy about a tank, which as I said, is about the same if you pulled that room out of its underground context and placed it on a plain, and lobbed a 80 MT nuclear nuke at it, which relies on such a flawed premise that I don't even know where to start from in order to say how a failure this analogy is. In essence, it doesn't even give any idea about how thick the walls would be, nor what they would be made of, nor doesn't give any explanation as to why the UNSC would use unobtainium for the separation walls of its rooms, but decide to only use shitty concrete and a variant of steel for the main protection. And that's where we are. You, hiding between two absurd claims, and dodging any request for an intelligent and concise clarification. With, in the background, the implication that walls would survive a direct 80 MT nuclear explosion, when the UNSC considered that 300 meters of dense protection would be absolutely necessary, and with that same UNSC preferring to use that super duper miracle material of yours for the walls of its rooms, instead of using it in the 300 meters thick lid meant to protect the whole complex. Even several posts ago, I made an invitation for such a clarification, by saying something akin to "OK then let's admit I'm totally dumb." But even there, you couldn't keep it simple. It's painfully clear why you don't want to state your opinion openly: it's retarded beyond salvation, and would expose you as a Haloïte wanker. But don't be afraid, we got that from your very first post in this thread. As final note, since you refused to state your opinion and preferred trolling around, I accept your concession. Thanks.
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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#398 | |||||||||||||
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Registered
Join Date: 28 May 2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 3,572
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Yes, using the word 'hit' is awkward but not incomprehensible. For example, bombs can be considered to hit things (though this is normally when they are dropped), and nuclear explosions can also hit things. It has a relatable meaning. On the other hand, claiming that 'direct' actually means 'indirect', or that 'room' means 'not just the room, but the whole facility' is completely nonsensical. Quote:
"Even if the room survives the nuke, it won't survive the effects of the nuke. Therefore, it won't survive the nuke." I hope you can see the problem with that. Anyway, gravity isn't a problem. Unless the room was already collapsing when it was built, under the weight of the stuff that's already on top of it. Quote:
And, please. I couldn't mock your position any better than you already do. ![]() Quote:
Anyway, you don't seem to understand why your line of argument is retarded. What you're trying to do is modify the quote itself to make it fit other evidence. Unfortunately, this doesn't work, because the meaning of the quote taken in isolation is divorced from the ultimate validity of said quote in terms of all canon. Let me give you an example. Just say that you have a number from the ICS, and then you have a different quote that contradicts it. What you can't do is say "to reconcile this, we need to change the meaning of the ICS!" and then 'interpret' '200' as '10' because it 'fits better'. What you should be doing is interpreting it correctly in isolation, and then trying to rationalise within those bounds, and throwing things out if that's impossible. But instead, you seem to be content with claiming that 'direct' has to mean 'indirect' and that 'room' means 'facility' in order to make it fit your imaginary contradictions. Your so-called 'request for clarification' is retarded. The quote doesn't have any information on 'how thick the walls should be'. Therefore it is irrelevant. The quote doesn't say 'what the room would really be about' (grammar?) either, so that's also irrelevant. Similarly, what the walls are made of are irrelevant. The only important thing in interpreting the quote is what it says itself, which is that a direct hit on the room is survivable. Then, the nuke should be placed directly outside the room, to fit with directly. And a reasonable example of that is in an adjacent room. This is as if a quote said "The Eiffel tower can support its own weight" and you said that I needed to tell you what the foundations were made out of and how thick they were to interpret something with a plainly obvious meaning. And that's obviously retarded. I've already explained what the quote means, and squealing and crying about 'dodging' just makes you look desperate. Quote:
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"While I side with hig's interpretation of the Reach quote (though I forget its context), the context of the other quote in FS about CASTLE REACH (the facility in question) makes it seem more like Hasley was referring to the entire facility." And since we already know the other quote is irrelevant, the consequences are obvious. Quote:
![]() You could make it even better, too, by backpedalling furiously back into the debate in an attempt to not lose the last word. |
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#399 | ||||||||||||||||||
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BANNED
Join Date: 3 Nov 2007
Posts: 4,490
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Let's make it clear. I really had hard times believing that one person could claim that the book pretended the UNSC had access to a material that is so tough that they use it for the walls between two rooms of an underground base, yet don't even use a layer of this magic material in the 300 meters thick shield, for which they obtusely decided to use good ol' concrete and reinforced steel instead.
But before that, let's just clear the first part of your post that deals with the penetrator warheads and so on. You have repeatedly been strawmaning my position and sprouting lies. It's quite necessary to go through that, for the sake of correction and accuracy. Now, since the arguments are all over the place, in no particular order, you'll excuse me for piecing the two parts together, for proper sorting. After that, I'll give my final, concise opinion on the 80 MT nuke and the magic wall thing. Oh and before you act stupid again, a claimed concession of the opponent does not equal exit of the thread, just that I merely consider that you failed and we don't agree. This does not prevent me from commenting further. First Part: Bunker busters, blasts and other shockwaves Quote:
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Well at this point you're literally getting lost in your own fantasy, I'm afraid, and you're reading way too much into my sentences. From the beginning, I treated ALL aspects of a penetrator weapon. Some would be less effective than others. At the time I speculated on the penetrator weapon, I clearly said I wasn't sure of what the complex' layout was. I considered that the air blast of a nuclear weapon would be relevant in certain conditions. When you look at the effects of the solid shell, filled with 500 tonnes of TNT, did to a Navy warship when it exploded, and just with air blast, with no tunnel to concentrate and guide the blast whatsoever, it came obvious to me that a weapon that would have a yield 160,000 greater and a power really higher than that of TNT would clearly be nothing to scoff at if it managed to hit a sensible spot and have an access to the inside of the complex. I never pretended it would level the complex, but it may clearly affect the closest rooms, depending on the obstacles and the complex' layout in the region next to the entry points. And that, without considering the 80 megaton nuke's fireball. Quote:
An air blast is also relative to a shockwave. Quote:
It is actually very simple. You could have a powerful shockwave going through the solid metal walls of a tunnel and it could fail to even crack the metal to any relevant degree, and therefore fail to injure or kill anyone in it. The ground shockwave would clearly travel far away down the tunnel and beyond. However, the powerful air blast, this, would be far more effective at breaking small stuff littering the corridor. It would be far more lethal, notably because of the killing shards it would carry, hitting anyone in the tunnel. Even the sheer over pressure of the close explosion would at the very least kill people if they were exposed to it, and that's pretty much all there was to my point. Then, if there is a seal that block the air blast, it becomes moot, which also was my point. I didn't treat the air blast like some magic force that would hit a door and transmit a great deal of energy to the air volume behind that door. And if this wasn't enough... Quote:
See, I did not dissociate the nuke's effects from the nuke. That's stupid, but that's just you. When you speak about a city that's leveled, do you separate the air blast from the destruction caused by the nuke, or do you say the nuke did it? If you go with the first choice, you're beyond hope. Obviously I never claimed something so stupid, but never mind! ![]() Eventually, what I could add is a middle option above, where the room is more or less destroyed, but the rest of the complex is not affected much, but it wouldn't change anything to the idea that I'm convinced that the menace comes from the surface, not from the next room. Thus, we get to the second part... Second Part: 80 megatons nuke, 300 meters thick shield and magic walls Your claim basically is, that according to the book, the UNSC builds its rooms, and the walls between adjacent rooms, with super materials that can withstand a direct 80 megaton nuclear detonation. As such, if there were two adjacent rooms, if a nuke detonated in the first, the second one would survive the explosion. What you have utterly failed to do is show how this make sense, or is even feasible, or even fits with the rest of Halo's canon. This came after your attempt at refuting the idea that there were more than 300 meters of materials which were just concrete and reinforced steel. I had to go pick quotations from TFoR itself to show you that contrary to your claim, the facility where Hasley stood was not protected by at least two kilometers of all the materials listed, plus granite and titanium-A. And to silence your accusations of cherry picking, denial and bad reading, I also proved that there had been more than one facility at Reach. You did not reconsider your position, despite this evidence. A pity, because it was clear that a 80 MT nuke could clearly be a relevant threat to structure located only 300 meters under the surface. And now, where are we? Well let's see... Quote:
Nylund says 300 meters of concrete and reinforced steel, from the surface to the complex, and that is all. Pretending the contrary is inventing stuff. I'm going with what the book describes. As for proving that the room is inferiorly or equally built, it's not up to me to do it. I cannot prove that they use more than what is described for this part of the installation, at that time. That is your burden. If you do have evidence of better materials than concrete, r-steel and wallpaper, then be my guest. Otherwise, we pretty much conclude that you concede those subpoints. Then the "hit": Quote:
![]() And yes, I think a "hit" is better understood, in this scenario, as a weapon --fired from high altitude or orbit-- that strikes the surface, above all as it concludes the author's description of the surface to complex 300 meters thick shield, rather than understanding a hit as a bomb exploding next door, especially considering the security setup of this place, since the orbital hit is far more likely to occur than a commando intrusion. As for the "teleported nuke" claim, it's really unfortunate, then, that your post is the proof that you came with that silly nuke teleportation strawman/mockery, while the part you quoted from me only referred to the hypervelocity impact of a buster warhead, something rather down to earth. Quote:
I'm not basing my interpretation upon a fact given from some other source; contrary to you, who as proved above, implies that there is more than 300 meters of concrete and r-steel. I'm merely looking at the fact that I don't see any logic in pretending that the 300 meters thick shield would be made of material infinitely poorer than the magic stuff that the walls are made of. It's stupid. You want to block your enemy's fire as soon as possible, not let its weapons threaten the complex and literally knock on the door of each room, and count on the walls to stop a firepower that managed to get through 300 meters of concrete and reinforced steel! But yes, if I were to try to compare TFOR's extract to other excerpts, I could ask you where do we get evidence that rooms in other ground bases are built with a couple meters of material that can withstand a 80 MT nuclear charge... unless of course you want to pretend that the walls between two rooms and many dozens of meters thick and composed of dense alloys. But then again, I'd ask you why use it for the walls, and not the shield above the whole complex. Something tells me that we'd probably find far more cases of UNSC walls and reinforced doors blown up with HE charges, than them requiring 80 megatons charges to go down. And I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be taking too many risks in thinking that we may also find some references about nuclear charges used to destroy entire UNSC structures effectively, either placed in or out. You said that what I "should be doing is interpreting [the quote] correctly in isolation, and then trying to rationalize within those bounds, and throwing things out if that's impossible." Your methodology of isolation is absurd. I'm taking the paragraph as a whole, with the context. You, on the contrary, shred it to confetti only to pick the only part that suits you. The quote says the room would survive a direct hit, but it was never precised where this direct hit would occur. "A direct hit [on the surface]" is more than implied considering that the description of the 300 meters thick shield exacly precedes the nuclear warhead statement. Then, on the list of awkward analogies, we have this one: Quote:
What the book actually says is more along the lines of "the Eiffel tower is a 324 meters high structure made of 10,000 tonnes of steel, and its restaurant level (where Dr. Hasley often eats) can withstand an extremely powerful direct lightning strike", while we all know that the lightning will always hit the top of the tower. And even there, the analogy is not perfect, but stills better than what you came with. I really had hard times to believe your position, but now there's really no doubt about it anymore. There's perhaps you could still do, though. Are you capable of proving the existence of such formidable building materials so it would totally refute my point of view on this? Pick any UNSC building, surface or underground bases, other bunkers, and show me that it can withstand anything, that bullets don't dent it, than it can withstand a car or helicopter crashing into it, or even a plane or chemical missile. That is, after all, pretty much required by your side, considering how you vehemently defend your position. Quote:
![]() Although I admit I forgot he said that, that's obviously doesn't stand up as good support. You know, wellis, SE, that didn't really sound like "everyone" either. And how strong is TA supposed to be? After all, it takes roughly 50 GJ of energy to vaporize one cubic meter of titanium. TA is one of the UNSC's best materials, if not THE best one. Resisting the nuclear blast of a 80 megatons nuke detonating inside a room, in an underground complex, would require your walls' and door's material to be seriously tolerant regarding heat. See, this is why your position makes zero fucking sense. Unless TA is like million times better than titanium, but then against you have to question how that TA could still be considered a cousin of titanium at all. That's beyond alchemy.
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. “This is how science progresses. Somebody comes up with a wild idea, and then they all pounce on it and kick you to death, and then you start off on another silly idea.” - Adrian Gibbs. . "War does not determine who is right - only who is left." - Bertrand Russell. |
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#400 | |
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SB Head Dungeon Master
Join Date: 3 May 2006
Posts: 13,841
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The greatest weapon isn't logic, reason, or evidence. It's silence. Those who cannot speak cannot be heard. The Commissar of Death and his Guard cannot be wrong because they cannot hear it. Out of pride, out of ignorance, out of friendship, but never in justice. --The Archives of the Black Library (An obscure 40k reference...Cookie to those who find it!) |
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