Terminator (franchise)/Headscratchers: Difference between revisions

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*** Yes, but a single solid object thawing out is going to take a ''lot'' longer than a hundred smaller objects thawing out because in the latter case there's a whole lot more surface area, whether they're near a [[Smoke and Fire Factory]] or not. It's the difference between him thawing out "eventually" and him thawing out ''now''.
** Answer: Yes, it would have. But then we wouldn't have had that [[Rule of Cool|cool shot]] of the T-1000 blasting into a bazillion frozen pieces.
** Alternate answer: No, it would not have. It's possible that its frozen state rendered the T-1000's substance vulnerable to some sort of damage or fracturing that it wouldn't have. Kinetic damage might cause microfractures to form in the tiny machines that make up the T-1000's whole when it's frozen, whereas they could otherwise be able to shift and bleed off the force to keep from being damaged. If "Bob" had left the T-1000 to thaw as it was, it might have been back to normal after thawing, instead of being a bit glitchy and slow.
 
* Is the "Arnold" model the T-101 or the T-800? I've seen it referred to as both in the context of the first two movies, though a similar, upgraded model was T-801 in the third movie.
** T-800, Model 101. The 800 refers to the endoskeleton, the Model 101 part is the outer layer of flesh.