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Old 07-19-2011, 09:40 AM
yellonet yellonet is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SYN_Bliss View Post
When you are firing a weapon that has rounds traveling 20x as fast as the vehicle car scenario you are talking about the shift of trajectory is so negligible that your eye will never see it, let alone see this bend in a very short section of emitted light source.
In your experience yes, but you're either stationary or in a relatively slow moving vehicle. How can you with that experience deny what can happen in a completely different scenario?

Quote:
Originally Posted by SYN_Bliss View Post
Even mythbusters made a special just about this instance. I suggest you watch it, you might actually learn something about physics. The amount of force required to overcome the sheer speed of a free fall elevator would leave every single bone and organ in your body a complete mush if any human being was somehow capable of even attempting such a feat. Last time I checked, no super human has been able to completely flatten their entire body by "jumping".

You're also a real bright one.
I know that it is not practically doable, that's why I said that it was theoretically possible, if you could jump fast enough, obviously your body would be built to withstand those forces.

And Mythbusters, really? I see where you get your extensive knowledge of physics.

Quote:
Originally Posted by SYN_Bliss View Post
Good thing I don't want a movie-esque feel when playing a flight sim. I'll stick to the effects my natural eye balls see.
No, you want the effect that you see when firing from a stationary position to be valid in all situations, even those that you have no experience of and obviously do not understand.

Quote:
Originally Posted by SYN_Bliss View Post
I call it like I see it. You have both proven to be utter idiots. I'm not here for a popularity contest, and I would rather not have a flight sim I play turned into a movie-esque feel or have it full of camera effects just because some people actually believe what they see in a movie as real life.
But it's not a camera effect. Light can and will draw bent lines in your eye. What's so hard to grasp about that. You are obviously incapable of even imagining seeing the discussed effect in any situation, just because you haven't seen it in your irrelevant experience.
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