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Talk:Terminator Genisys

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 01:37, 6 December 2014 by Ben41 (talk | contribs) (→‎MANPADS ID)
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Anachronistic Weapons

I hope they will explain how Sarah Connor in the early 1980's gets a hold of so many anachronistic weapons. --Ben41 (talk) 16:32, 5 December 2014 (EST)

In the trailer there is what appears to be a cobbled together version of the time machine, so best guess is that they jump forward from the 80s to present day like in the Sarah Conner Chronicles. You also see that version of the Terminator with longer grey hair in the trailer, which is either from him in the present day (assuming that just Sarah and Kyle make the jump), or it is actually an old human that the template is based on but I am more inclined to think the former. I think therefore there are four different time periods: 60s where the Terminator rescues young SC, 80s from the original film, present(ish) day after the time jump, and the future. Speaking of the scene from the 60's where the Terminator is carrying the child SC, he is carrying what appears to be a Carl Gustav Recoilless Rifle. --commando552 (talk) 19:18, 5 December 2014 (EST)

MANPADS ID

Couldn't fit the justification in the edit box so will put it here: That launcher is not a Redeye but rather the later Stinger (or a convincing mock-up) for the following reasons:

  • The sighting unit on the Redeye is slightly simpler looking being more of a solid box which is inline with the pivot point (example). On the Stinger the sight is offset on slanted brackets where it meets the rest of the launcher, and it is also more complicated in shape looking like there is stuff hanging under it (example), just like as seen in the cap.
  • The movies launcher has the IFF antenna which was used on the Stinger and not the Redeye (the wire cage looking thing above the tube opposite the sight). Granted this is easily (and commonly) faked, so this is not deffinitive by itself.
  • The bottom of the fire control unit appears to be squared off like on a Stinger, as opposed to on the Redeye where this is semi-circular.
  • Both launchers have what is called an un-caging switch (this unlock the gyro-stabilised seeker in the missile allowing it to track the target by itself after a target is found and get a better lock, and also to keep a lock whilst applying lead and super-elevation) which takes the form of a rectangular rubber pad on the left side of the fire control unit. On the original Redeye this was long, mounted in the middle and relatively high, as opposed to on the Stinger where it was smaller and mounted on the extreme bottom front corner. It's had to tell for sure due to the lighting and the fact that the launcher has been slightly dressed up, but it appears that the switch is in the Stinger position.

I'm curious, did you flip this cap yourself to get it the right way round? The version of the trailer I saw (here) had this shot reversed. --commando552 (talk) 19:42, 5 December 2014 (EST)

Yes, I flipped it because that's probably what it's going to look like in the finished film. --Ben41 (talk) 20:37, 5 December 2014 (EST)

Future guns

From some promo images that have been release, it appears that the future weapons are actually modified real guns:

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Both of them are AK type guns, Jason Clarke's appears to be an AKS-74U type (based on the mag well dimple and the top of the AKS-74U/AKMSU style front sight being visible, whilst Matt Smith's looks like a Galil MAR based on the distinctive rear sight. --commando552 (talk) 19:52, 5 December 2014 (EST)