Talk:Gravity lift: Difference between revisions

From Halopedia, the Halo wiki

No edit summary
 
m (→‎Canon note: removed: 21px)
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==Gravity Beam Theories==
The appearances section serves as a list of sources.--[[User:Raptor117|Raptor117]] 21:24, 13 March 2007 (UTC)


It is very possible that the gravity beam is merely a gravity lift put into maximum power on reverse as most people realize that as the grav beam hits the floor of the temple the debri appears to be pushed downward as the grav beam hits it. As the Master Chief falls deeper into the water there is a bright circle over him. That was the gravity beam directly over him. If that were an energy projector, then the Master Chief would be dead in an instant. The beam also emitted and formed itself on the belly of the ship exactly where the gravity lift should be. Unlike gravity beams an energy projector is entirely white and are mounted in different parts of covenant ships, unlike the so-called gravity beam which is placed in one specific spot which is exactly where the gravity lift is located. -- [[User:Halo3]] 01:11, 22 January 2007
:Not really... but I added the sources, so you're point is moot. '''[[User:Guesty-Persony-Thingy|<font color="#000000">G</font><font color="#770000"><sup>ü</sup></font><font color="#cc0000">é</font><font color="#ff0000"><sub>ß</sub></font><font color="#ff3333">Ł</font><font color="#ff6666"><sup>¥</sup></font>]]-[[User talk:Guesty-Persony-Thingy|<font color="#9999ff">∏</font><font color="#6666ff"><sub>é</sub></font><font color="#3333ff">Ґ</font><font color="#0000ff"><sup>∫</sup></font><font color="#0000cc">ø</font><font color="#000066"><sub>ñ</sub></font><font color="#000000">¥</font>]]-[[Special:Contributions/Guesty-Persony-Thingy|<font color="#000000"><sup>†</sup></font><font color="#007700">ħ</font><font color="#00cc00"><sub>î</sub></font><font color="#00ff00">И</font><font color="#44ff44"><sup>g</sup></font><font color="#99ff99">¥</font>]]''' 23:03, 17 April 2007 (UTC)


==Other Theories==
== Gravity plataform instead of gravity lift ==


It is also very possible that the covenant have uitlized the gravity technology of the forerunner.If a halo fan were to study the flowing gravity in Halo Installation 05's controll room as it is active,they will notice it looks almost exactly the same as the gravity beam from the covenant ship that destroyed regrets temple.The only differences are that the shipboard gravity beam is purple and seems to be better equiped,designed,and obviously more powerful as it is used for weapons purposes which is very unlike the gravity flow in Halo Installation 05's control room which is white and seems to be weaker and better equiped for the more simple and possibly more complex utility purposes.-- [[User:Halo3]] 01:11, 22 Februry 2007
The ''landing zones'' are called gravity plataforms and not gravity lift, it is clearly said in the uplift reserve waypoint video. Those articles should be renamed.--[[User talk:Ashary|Ashary]] 15:02, November 15, 2009 (UTC)
 
Although it shouldn't as Seargent Johnson in Halo: CE stated that it is a Gravity Lift. Shade turrets don't float on platforms, but class as Gravity Lifts. The Lift appears in Halo Wars can not be there on occasion as it is a standard division and is unlikely that a cruiser could have somemany different platforms, rather than a teleporter type of transport. Gruntijackal
 
:The whole system is referred to as "gravity lift". The "gravity platform" is just the platfrom on the ground. Plus, that is just another name for it - things can have multiple names. As for "''Those articles should be renamed''". What articles? There's just this one article for gravity lifts.  --[[User talk:Jugus|Jugus]] 15:39, November 15, 2009 (UTC)
 
 
==Canon note==
I'm just saying, the way that these things work in the canon would not be "propelling" the player up or down, as one might think with things like [[Portable Gravity Lift|this]]. The actual way this would work is that one would be near weightless in the spot that the gravity lift is activated, allowing them to "float" in that area.  Then (we're still talking about the Portable Gravs), when John (just as an example) would go too high up, the anti-gravity would have less of an effect on him, bringing him back down. And for stuff like the lift under the Truth and Reconciliation, things in there wouldn't be "lifted" up or down, but the people in there would feel weightlessness, allowing them to just lightly push up and float up to the top.  I know that things like Halo: First Strike subtly contradicts this at one point, but yeah, that's how it works.  I just wanted to note this because a lot of people think that in the canon, things like the Portable Grav Lift equipment actually pull them up or down forcefully. Vegerot goes RAWR!  [[User:Vegerot|<span style="color:midnightblue; font-weight:bold">Vegerot</span>]] ([[User talk:Vegerot|<span style="color:grey">talk</span>]])  13:29, 23 October 2011 (EDT)

Latest revision as of 13:48, January 15, 2019

The appearances section serves as a list of sources.--Raptor117 21:24, 13 March 2007 (UTC)

Not really... but I added the sources, so you're point is moot. Güéߣ¥-éҐøñ¥-ħîИg¥ 23:03, 17 April 2007 (UTC)

Gravity plataform instead of gravity lift[edit]

The landing zones are called gravity plataforms and not gravity lift, it is clearly said in the uplift reserve waypoint video. Those articles should be renamed.--Ashary 15:02, November 15, 2009 (UTC)

Although it shouldn't as Seargent Johnson in Halo: CE stated that it is a Gravity Lift. Shade turrets don't float on platforms, but class as Gravity Lifts. The Lift appears in Halo Wars can not be there on occasion as it is a standard division and is unlikely that a cruiser could have somemany different platforms, rather than a teleporter type of transport. Gruntijackal

The whole system is referred to as "gravity lift". The "gravity platform" is just the platfrom on the ground. Plus, that is just another name for it - things can have multiple names. As for "Those articles should be renamed". What articles? There's just this one article for gravity lifts. --Jugus 15:39, November 15, 2009 (UTC)


Canon note[edit]

I'm just saying, the way that these things work in the canon would not be "propelling" the player up or down, as one might think with things like this. The actual way this would work is that one would be near weightless in the spot that the gravity lift is activated, allowing them to "float" in that area. Then (we're still talking about the Portable Gravs), when John (just as an example) would go too high up, the anti-gravity would have less of an effect on him, bringing him back down. And for stuff like the lift under the Truth and Reconciliation, things in there wouldn't be "lifted" up or down, but the people in there would feel weightlessness, allowing them to just lightly push up and float up to the top. I know that things like Halo: First Strike subtly contradicts this at one point, but yeah, that's how it works. I just wanted to note this because a lot of people think that in the canon, things like the Portable Grav Lift equipment actually pull them up or down forcefully. Vegerot goes RAWR! Vegerot (talk) 13:29, 23 October 2011 (EDT)