#73
Family First
#76
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2012 VW GTI 2 Dr Manual
#78
#79
#80
#81
Awesome that you saw an actual UFO. Would love to see something like that myself, regardless of whether its meteorological phenomenon or something man-made.
My video was meant to trick the viewer, but not into thinking that the UFO's were real, but rather that everything else was.
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2012 VW GTI 2 Dr Manual
#82
#83
I love how nerdy the trolling is on this thread.
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2012 VW GTI 2 Dr Manual
#84
--Measure with mike, mark with chalk, cut with axe, pound to fit, paint to match
#85
We used Maya for all the 3D (Sky, landscape, car, UFO's). Composited in After FX, with a bit of Nuke as well. Video CoPilot's Lens FX was used for the lens flares. Mudbox for 3D painting. Photoshop for traditional painting.
The most difficult element was the landscape because it had hundreds of millions of polygons, so we instanced most of the trees/bushes,grass.
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2012 VW GTI 2 Dr Manual
#87
#88
#89
I'm trolling how? The brilliant C4 A6 once again makes a masterful post, this time by making a statement of how the laws of thermodynamics cannot be broken on a short sci-fi CGI film. I make a point that our scientific laws are not perfect as there are far too many things outside of our world that we do not yet understand. As I pointed out, an example would be singularity. If something like this truly does exist, what would make you believe in absolute certainty that the object would have to make a lot of sound for it to disappear?
#90
#91
A sound is transmitted by the vibration of the molecules of air. If no molecules were vibrated during the apparition or dissolution of the object, then no sound would occur. One way to achieve this would be to have the molecules of the object occupy the space between the existing air molecules, thereby creating minimal disturbance when appearing or disappearing. A molecule of oxygen has the size of approximately 292 picometers (using the covalent radii equal to 1/2 the distance between the covalent bonding nuclei, natch). The space between air molecules, at STP, is about 3.3 nanometers, so there's quite a bit of wiggle room for a motivated molecule to sneak in.
Nevertheless, given the number of molecules occupying that space, it would be a considerable feat indeed. Thus, the ability to beam a troller into a wall is not going to come anytime soon. Sadly.
--Measure with mike, mark with chalk, cut with axe, pound to fit, paint to match
#92
Originally Posted by Boyz in da Park
#96
Yep. One creative way to think of it is, the craft may not make any sound because there's a vacuum around the UFO. Maybe the same vacuum that allows it to float without any jet like propulsion? Energy does not always equal audible sound. Take the sun for a example. A huge ball of energy but the vacuum of space will not allow the molecules to emit what we would consider "sound".
#97
--Measure with mike, mark with chalk, cut with axe, pound to fit, paint to match
#98
It's a magnetized plasma - not a vacuum between the Earth (and spacecraft) and the sun. That actually allows for a number of different waves, among them also acoustic-like (longitudinal) ones. However, the power of these waves is very small, especially in the audible range. /nerd
Aung San Suu Kyi
#100
Yeah, I'd like to see that too. Cool. Plus you never responded to my personal message.I'm making the breakdown now. Thinking of also including CG turntables of the GTI. Is that something you'd like to see?
You looking to do any work on a feature film?
'11 TTS Coupe
'08 A4 Avant 2.0t S-line Titanium
'01 A4 Avant 1.8t S-line (Sold)
'90 Coupe Quattro 20v (Sold)
'95 "Getta" VR6 (Sold)
#101
If I'm reading this correctly, then you're saying that the ship would have to materialize "in parts" where every single molecule of the ship would sneak in between air molecules in the exact same orientation each time to completely materialize the ship without making a sound, right?
Then how would the molecules of the ship 1) know where to go exactly and 2) rebond with each other upon materialization so the ship doesn't just fall apart into tiny atoms upon materializing in our atmosphere?
Lay off, dick. It's all good fun, and besides, aren't sci-fi films supposed to be both otherworldly yet "believable" to an extent?
Hell, lightsabers didn't need to make a sound when waved, but you can think about it as a fluorescent tube. If you take one of those fluorescent light tubes and turned it on, you can hear the humming of the ballast that's containing the gas that produces the light. You can think of the lightsaber as a fluorescent light without a solid ballast, but one present none the less (or else the light would just escape into the air every time you turned it on, and it would be good for only one use.) So you turn on the lightsaber and the humming may be the ballast containing the high energy/high temperature gas.
Again, it's all good fun to try and logically explain, whether in favor or against, any sci-fi phenomena.
#102
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2012 VW GTI 2 Dr Manual
#104
Did it look like this?
--Measure with mike, mark with chalk, cut with axe, pound to fit, paint to match
#105
Like I said, it wouldn't be easy. Especially that bonding part. Troublesome, that bit. Not to mention the reanimation of all life-forms and the energizing of any electronic components. Anything in motion at the time is left to fend for itself because I'll be dipped if I can figure out how that would work.
Now that I think about it, it would be much easier and a whole lot more fun if the ship appeared and disappeared with a great thundering whallop to let everybody know that they had best pay attention because something very important just happened.
--Measure with mike, mark with chalk, cut with axe, pound to fit, paint to match