Destructionator XIII wrote:
Oh, if only it worked out that way! But, you missed three zeros. 100 kPa is 100,000 Pa, not 100.
(When doing calcs, always remember your units. Dimensional analysis catches mistakes like this.)
Div 1000 and get 0.037 m^3, or round it to 0.04 m^3.
It sure would be hilarious of you didn't make that mistake though. It would show the X-Wing could be completely enveloped by a mere 20 grams of iron! Of course, as it is, a cubic meter of solid iron - over 7 tons - is far more than required to envelop it anyway...
Also, you might know this, but also remember that the boiling point changes as pressure decreases. So if redoing the same thing in space, the temperature might be as low as ~1812K, right over the melting point, and it would still evaporate. (Of course, with temperature that "low", it will quickly radiate the heat and drop back down, wanting to immediately shed its latent heat of fusion and resolidify. So while it is strictly a lower limit, it is probably better to go higher anyway.)
Well, I guess that's what I get for trying to do calcs on four hours of sleep. Bleh. Okay, so it was more like 4 times the volume. But wait!
You immediately shift to outer space, to get a lower temperature (because you like bullshitting smaller numbers however you can)...while forgetting that
the pressure drops too. Or just ignoring it because you like your small numbers and fuck honesty.
I can't find anything on the boiling point of iron in vacuum, and I'm guessing you couldn't either since you were saying things like "might be" and "around", but let's go with that. So, we change the temperature to 1812K and the pressure to 1 Pa. This gets us (.1409) * (8.314) * (1812) / 1 or around 2000 cubic meters. So it would create a cloud of gas around 2000 times its solid volume.
Remind me again how blasters don't create holes big enough to explain all the smoke?
It is all very close to alike, though, in every case we can see the white vapor on the edges. There is sometimes the red stuff dominating it too though. You'll note that my position is not that all the gas is from the bolt, just that some of it is. There's surely a combination of factors.
....
But, wait a minute. Where the hell did 7 liters of liquid water come from in that scene?
...
What we see is almost certainly water vapor, and it has no apparent source.
Rupturing a pipe is the only way to account for it. Every fucktard who has used that scene to do firepower calcs betrays his lack of knowledge in high school chemistry.
Wait, you're going to argue that every blaster impact creates "identical" smoke and then you're going to turn around and argue that one of those incidents was water vapor? Can you even try to make a logically-consistent argument?
Rofl, there's an effects mistake in that first frame. But yeah, Curtis Saxton estimates on the order of 10^14 J for that. Quite a lot, certainly. Is it inconsistent with everything else?
In a sense, yes - it implies a difference of a million times between fighters and star destroyers. What good are fighters against that? The best explanation is they have to use missiles and bombs to bring down an ISD. Saxton says a game claims it would take several dozen proton torpedoes to take the shields down.
A 10^14 J asteroid hit destroys the bridge on one asteroid, according to him. He puts the shields at about 10^16 J total, which means it would fall under a few minutes sustained fire of their own weapons. Less, if they can get a full broadside.
This all actually makes sense. His numbers make well enough sense and the result is amazingly consistent. A star destroyer is some million times bigger than a starfighter, if we assume linear scaling (which does apply to real life, and most Warsies assume it applies to SW too), this is also consistent with the observed megajoule range output on them.
Star Destroyers have pretty impressive power. We'd have to nuke the living piss out of one of them to take it down, which is much easier said than done. Luckily, the OP doesn't include Star Destroyers.
tl;dr: I don't want to answer how this pokes holes in my Tibanna gas theory so I'm just going to try and start another argument to spread things even further.
A big reason this takes so many pages is that you keep repeating the same shit. I've never claimed proton torpedoes couldn't make that turn and have brought up several theories that explain all the available evidence. You keep focusing on a literal interpretation of a fragment of the whole.
Step back and look at the big picture.
Would you like for me to quote you on saying "Star Wars missiles" "can't" outperform modern missiles? You did claim it, you were called on it, now you're trying to pretend you never made the claim in the first place.
Oh, you mean where you thought an 8g turn at 100 m/s was a display of hyperadvanced maneuverability?
Yeah, good times.
Because you were pretending Star Wars fighters don't ever do things more advanced than 'fly in straight lines lol'? Like I said, it wouldn't be so easy to poke holes in your arguments if you didn't make them so hilariously overgeneralized.
Yeah, and you'll recall that makes sense too: he slowed down to see what he was coming up on, and sped back up when he realized what it was. We saw the acceleration he was doing when the buzz droids were on his ship, which does two things: A) shows his acceleration at that point and, perhaps more importantly, B) shows the fleet itself wasn't undergoing mass acceleration, so you can't hide behind "relative!!1" when the rest of the scenes fail to show high acceleration.
Except you're assuming he was going at his full acceleration. Perhaps he was accelerating. Was he going full-out? Considering he wasn't in full control of his fighter, why should we buy that assumption?
I'll note that you still haven't provided a single example of a fighter doing acceleration > 8g (that one turn).
Would you like for me to quote the ICS? It is canon, you know. You can bitch about it if you like, but I'm going to be honest: if you don't like Lucasfilm's canon policy maybe you should just give up and stop debating in that universe. You don't get to declare your own canon policy.
...eh, screw it. I'll get to the rest of this post after dinner.