well, the purpose of this thread is to see if He-Man is storng enough to stop juggs momentum. Juggs is walkin' the other direction with his end of the rope before he-man begins to pull his end. it's basically what goober stated earlier. what is more powerful...power of greyskull or power of cytorrak.
Originally posted by charlemagne9746
well, the purpose of this thread is to see if He-Man is storng enough to stop juggs momentum. Juggs is walkin' the other direction with his end of the rope before he-man begins to pull his end. it's basically what goober stated earlier. what is more powerful...power of greyskull or power of cytorrak.
The answer is still He-Man; it is the nature of his character to be as powerful as the objective requires.
Originally posted by darthgoober
This fight would actually come down to which is greater, the magic of Castle Greyskull or the power of Cyttorak so I won't make a call here due to a lack of evidence in that regard. However I would like to address one thing...Thor's godblast DID stop Juggs. In fact it was pushing Juggs back until the ground collapsed under him.
i thought it momentarily pushed him back because he wasnt expecting something that powerful, and then he decided to use his full strength and walk against it, and thats when the ground caved. ill have to look it up again.
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
A tug-of-war begins from a stationary position. He-Man would have infinite strength before the tug-of-war begins. Juggernaut would have to build moment to even approach infinite inertia.
You realize infinite strength really doesn't matter in this situation? He-Man only weighs so much, and the ground can only support only so much force. Juggernaut's feet, I am assuming, cover more surface area and he also weighs more. So overall Juggernaut starts out with an advantage.
Don't most tug-o-war games start with slack in the rope?
Originally posted by Ptr_Grifin
You realize infinite strength really doesn't matter in this situation? He-Man only weighs so much, and the ground can only support only so much force. Juggernaut's feet, I am assuming, cover more surface area and he also weighs more. So overall Juggernaut starts out with an advantage.Don't most tug-o-war games start with slack in the rope?
Weight and surface area have nothing to do with it. A tug-of-war is a feat of strength.
Originally posted by Adam_PoE
Weight and surface area have nothing to do with it. A tug-of-war is a feat of strength.
You don't really know what you are talking about. A 150 horsepower bulldozer can out pull a 500 horsepower Dodge Viper. The main reasons the bulldozer can out pull the viper, is because of the weight and that the dozer has tracks which cover more surface area, coupled with low end torque.
While strength does play a key role in this, there will be a point where it doesn't matter who is stronger.
I wasn't saying it didn't matter at all.
Much of it comes down to who pulls first; He-Man has enough strength to pull Juggs off his feat which could count for a win if he went first as well as Juggs to He-Man. If they both pulled at the same moment then it would come down to whose magic is strong assuming that the ground could withstand the force. The respective weight and size plays very little role here because of the force that both are exerting, if both are perfectly matched than that would be a factor.
My main point is that Juggernaut is certainly strong enough to hold his own, if they start pulling at the same time. Both of them would instantly pull each other causing the ground to collapse beneath them, digging themselves in. But Juggernaut is bigger and should be able to pull He-man and the ground with him.
He-man could pull fast enough to straight up pull him out of the ground, but Juggs could do the same.