is Spidermans web natural (bite) or is it in little web cartrages on his wrist??? in the old comics/cartoon its like C02 cartrages but in the movie its natural...........please tell me which ones real??!!
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The comic book is what most fans go by, a lot of Spiderman comics have been written in scenarios where Spidey either runs out of web fluid during a crucial fight, or occasionally someone like Reed Richards will use it's parts like McGuyver.
The organic webbing in the movie was kind of a cop out excuse so that the director wouldn't need to explain how he was able to shoot webbing so far and accurately.
In comic book continuity, his web is made of fluid and shoots out of web shooters that he made himself. in the movies they made it organic webbing because they had time restraints and it would take too long to explain all that.
ive never understood the time restraint thing though. scenes are edited out of movies only 90 minutes long becuase "it would make the movie too long", but we still see movies that are 3 hours long being released all the time. why not just make the 90 minute movie longer?
Spider-Man uses web-shooters which are twin devices worn on his wrists which can shoot thin strands of a special “web fluid” at high pressure. The web fluid is a shear-thinning liquid (virtually solid until a shearing force is applied to it, rendering it fluid) whose exact formula is as yet unknown, but is related to nylon. On contact with air, the long-chain polymer knits and forms an extremely tough, flexible fiber with extraordinary adhesive properties. The web fluid’s adhesive quality diminishes rapidly with exposure to air. (Where it does not make contact with air, such as the attachment disk of the web-shooter, it remains very adhesive.) After about 2 hour, certain imbibed ether cause the solid form of the web fluid to dissolve into a powder. Because the fluid almost instantly sublimates from solid to liquid when under shear pressure, and is not adhesive in its anaerobic liquid/solid phase transition point, there is no clogging of the web-shooter’s parts.
The spinneret mechanism in the web-shooter is machined from stainless steel, except for the turbine component, which is machined out of a block of Teflon and the two turbine bearings, which are made of amber and artificial sapphire. The wristlet and web fluid cartridges are mainly nickel-plated annealed brass. Spider-Man’s web cartridge belt is made out of brass and light leather and holds up to 30 cartridges. The cartridges are pressurized to 300 pounds per square inch and sealed with a bronze cap which is silver soldered closed. The wristlets have sharp steel nipples, which pierce the bronze cap when the cartridges are tightly wedged into their positions. A palm switch that is protected by a band of spring steel, which requires a 65 pounds pressure to trigger, actuates the hand-wound solenoid needle valve. The switch is situated high on the palm to avoid most unwanted firings. A rubber seal protects the small battery compartment. The effect of the very small turbine pump vanes is to compress (share) the web fluid and then force it, under pressure, through the spinneret holes which cold-draws it (stretches it: the process wherein nylon gains a four-fold increase in tensile strength), then extrudes it through the air where it solidifies. As the web fluid exits the spinneret holes, it is attracted to itself electro statically and thus can form complex shapes. The spinneret holes have three sets of adjustable, staggered openings around the turbine, which permit a single line, a more complex, spun web line, and a thick stream. The web line’s tensile strength is estimated to be 120 pounds per square millimeter of cross section. The 300 pounds per square inch of pressure in each cartridge is sufficient to force a stream of the complex web pattern an estimated 60 feet (significantly farther if shot in a ballistic parabolic arc).
and Venom's webbing just becuase it's more like the "Organic webbing" from the film
Venom can also shoot strands of the alien’s substance in the form of “webbing” at high pressure up to a distance of 70 feet. The alien’s substance seems to be composed of tough, flexible fibers of organic polymers, which regenerate swiftly after “shedding.” The strands have extraordinary adhesive properties, which diminish rapidly once they abandon their living source. After about three hours, with no source to nourish them, the strands dry up like dead skin and dissolve into a powder. The strands possess a tensile strength of 125 pounds per square millimeter of cross section.
He got killed during the Maximum Carnage storyline. Shriek was having issues with Carnage and when he threatend her Doppleganger tried to protect her but Carnage killed him to teach her a lesson
basically his webbing Organic in nature threw a differnt form of pressure was able to shoot normal and sharp projectile webbing
The form of Spiderman as we know him, is the perfect balance of his mutation. It's really cool actually.
As Spiderman kept mutating (his Spider-powers were just the beginning of what was to come) he turned into a Man-Spider - only then did he get organic webbing that shot from his hands.
Maybe one day Pete will get organic webbing, but until that day comes, the writers are sticking (no pun intended) to his original powers.
Movie - he can shoot webbing conveniently from two slots that have miraculously appeared just under his wrists, hiding them from view too.
Comics - The spider bite gives him knowledge on how to make webbing (what ingredients to use and hoe to mix them perfectly) and only Peter Parker had the scientific intellect to secretly put 2 and 2 together and make these one-of-a-kind webshooters.
The comics make Spiderman look to be truly unique - wheras in the movie, pretty much ANYBODY could have been Spiderman. Only someone of Peters intellect could have made the webshooters, so if anybody apart from Pete was given the powers, you wouldn't have seen a web slinging Spiderman, just a Spiderman who could stick to walls, and jump and stuff.
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