Kaeb Odellas, on 04 February 2018 - 04:37 PM, said:
Look, some aspects of Battletech are worth keeping. Some are not.
Breathing skin. (Sorry to edit this again but I thought of something I should add). I work at a factory that produces large plastic objects (usually tanks, laundry carts, etc) through rotomolding. The ovens get to about a thousand degrees and one not far away can reach 3,000 degrees. It sucks in the summer and we wear less despite the hazards of touching the metal even after cooling. There are, of course, several types of metal used on the molds. After simple water and fan cooling the metal frames are actually chilling to the touch even when the rest of the metal could burn your fingers. Each week we clean the ovens to reduce fire risks and we have to do it while the oven is over 160 degrees in order to make it easier, sometimes I start with it around 200 and stand outside to get the edges before walking in. A few weeks back it was freaking cold so I didn't take off my jacket, figured sheltering myself from the hot air would make it easier. Nope. Instead I sweat harder than I ever would just standing inside there and the inside of my jacket was soaked (leading me to get sick soon after with the cold air outside).
My point is if the power for the cooling vest ran out, its just a vest and they can shred it, they aren't wearing much anyway. If they were in a full suit they would cook really damn fast in a hot cockpit. Even so, part of life support's functionality is to keep the cockpit cool despite the hot environment, and there is little doubt that the metals used would be those that do not retain heat as strongly as other metals. For example iron, aluminum, and some types of steel retain heat for a long period of time (a surprising thing to learn about aluminum) while the other steel used in the frame of the mold is actually cold enough to touch with less than 10 minutes of cooling (while the rest will still burn the heck out of your finger even after 40+ minutes of cooling after a 50 minute cooking cycle at 700 degrees).
Now if you lose one or both life support systems, then I'd be concerned about being practically naked inside of a cockpit. But then it wouldn't matter what you were wearing, either you GTFO from the cockpit or you die.
(Back to original post) Also much of the cockpit surfaces a pilot is supposed to be able to touch isn't supposed to be metal or metallic.
If they were trying to attract teens... where's the cleavage and why is it always granny panties with bulky Frankenstein helmets?
Hate to say it, but that doesn't attract horny teens.
That's how you do it.
Full body catsuits work too.
But feature concealing life preserver vests and granny panties with the most unfashion-tuned boots one could imagine? Yeah, no.
Not even gonna mention that most of the pilot pictures are men in their skivvies. Considering the male target audience... I'd say they did a poor job of fitting that method of drawing "horny" teens in.
Even Japanese Battletech kinda did poor on the attracting horny teens department with their version.
Similar aesthetic, more clothes.
Then again... Enforcer Japanese version.
Their stuff looks a lot more....technically advanced.
Edited by Koniving, 05 February 2018 - 06:26 AM.