Weapon hack




















Even though they don't know it, the Robins are being hunted by a mysterious woman who calls herself the "first Robin. The Robins all went their separate ways except for Tim Drake who was previously kidnapped by the mysterious "first" Robin.

Batman's trust issues always come back to haunt him and not telling the Bat-Family about this mysterious Robin could seemingly be the final straw for the Robins. Carlos is a freelance features writer and a lifelong comic book fan since he found a battered issue of Batman at his local Blockbuster when he was a kid.

You can find him at Vaquero2XL on Twitter. Share Share Tweet Email 0. Related Topics Comics Comic Features batman robin.

Dec 18, Plays Defence 3. Rating: Currently 4. Random Game Click here to be taken to a random hacked game. Games being played by others. Rush G and that will be North Korea. Just press c once they all come in lol. Well I got a long way to go until I'm So you're here for the nostalgia, eh? Enter your comment: chars left.

All display advertising on Arcadeprehacks. If you would like to advertise please visit www. In short, these launch systems use electromagnetism and well timed electronics to propel a mass of magnetic material down a straight or sometimes curved track. Multiple pairs of coils are placed along the track, with each pair subsequently energized by high current as the payload approaches. By using many coils in succession, the mass and its payload can be accelerated to high speed.

While a homemade rail launcher is unlikely to turn the tides of war, [Tom Stanton] explores their lethal potential with an experiment involving high-speed video and supermarket sausages, with gruesome results. Remember Terminator 2? Guns were nearly useless against the murderous T, played by Robert Patrick.

The effects were done by Stan Winston, who died in , but a video and short blurb shared by the Stan Winston School of Character Arts revealed, to our surprise and delight, that the bullet impact effects were not CGI.

How was this accomplished? These realistic-looking crater sculpts were then cast in some mixture of foam rubber, and given a chromed look by way of vacuum metallizing also known as vacuum deposition which is a way of depositing a thin layer of metal onto a surface. Vacuum deposition is similar to electroplating, but the process does not require the object being coated to have a conductive surface.

A variety of splashes in different sizes get individually compressed into receptacles in a fiberglass chest plate. Covering each is a kind of trapdoor, each held closed by a single pin on a cable. To trigger a bullet impact effect, a wireless remote control pulls a cable, which pulls its attached pin, and the compressed splash pattern blossoms forth in an instant, bursting through pre-scored fabric in the process.

Sadly there are no photos of the device itself, but you can see it in action in the testing video shared by the Stan Winston School, embedded below. Despite reading Hackaday daily and seeing the incredible things that people do, something comes along that just sort of blows you away every once in a while.

Previously, [Joel] had built a web-slinging system based around a pressurized tank of hot glue worn like a backpack. What it lacked in miniaturization, it made up for in functionality. However, [JT of Build IRL] created a grappling-based Spider-Man system that fired ropes which got [Joel] thinking that perhaps the hot glue and the grappling system could be combined for a smaller overall package.

His solution is quite simple. Old CO2 cartridges filled with glue and a small nozzle drilled in are loaded into a quick-connect fitting.

The hot glue is heated via an induction coil on a small tool belt before loading.



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