Godzilla & Meiko
Hey, ever thought about designing a wall that can stop a giant like me? I’d love to know how you’d tackle that.
Sure thing, let’s treat the giant’s stride as a 10‑ton hammer strike. I’d design a 2‑meter thick concrete wall with a steel lattice core and an energy‑absorbing viscoelastic layer on the inside. The lattice keeps the wall rigid, while the rubber‑like core spreads out the impact over time. If that still fails, we can always install a treadmill and let him walk instead.
That’s solid, but I don’t think I’d want to walk on a treadmill. If the wall can hold, I’m all set. If not, I’ll just take the floor out. Keep it strong, keep it real.
Sure thing, just crank up the concrete to 3 m thick, bolt in a carbon‑fiber plate on the surface, and back it with a foam‑filled cavity that stretches up to a foot. That should stop a giant without the treadmill nonsense. If it fails, we’ll just have to replace the floor anyway.
Nice plan, but I’m more about smashing than building. If you need a test run, just let me know.
No need for a real test, I can run a full simulation with the stress‑analysis model and check every bolt. If it passes, we can go to build. That’s safer than letting a giant just walk through the wall.
Got it, keep the simulations tight. I’ll be ready if the wall takes a hit.
Good, I'll flag the model for an extreme‑impact scenario and print the stress map in real time. If it cracks, I'll send you the debug log before you start a smashing session.
Sounds good, just keep me posted, and I’ll be ready if it takes a hit.