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#259 - lilin (08/07/2012) [-]
For all those thinking "Woah, it cut through the wood too!"   
   
Look carefully, and you'll notice it was there before and during the cutting of the apple.   
   
I'm just saiyan.
For all those thinking "Woah, it cut through the wood too!"

Look carefully, and you'll notice it was there before and during the cutting of the apple.

I'm just saiyan.
User avatar #294 to #259 - BunnyStew (08/07/2012) [-]
This type of cutting is used for precision metal cutting as well. When mixing the water with plasma and heating it up/ pressurizing it a lot more, it can get to the point where it cuts through 154CM steel and higher.
User avatar #298 to #294 - lilin (08/07/2012) [-]
Yeah, I know. I'm just saying that the cut was already there, implying that the water didn't do that, or at least not during that gif.
User avatar #299 to #298 - BunnyStew (08/07/2012) [-]
Ah, gotcha. But for the record, water by its self can cut most 440 and SV30 rated steels. Once you introduce extreme heat and plasma, the sky is the limit.
User avatar #305 to #299 - lilin (08/07/2012) [-]
Yeah. Fuck knifes, I got water!

Wait... I don't watch ATLA or LOK, but... couldn't waterbenders.... oh god.
User avatar #273 to #259 - SnugglyWuggly (08/07/2012) [-]
What it that is from a former experiment with water pressure?
User avatar #282 to #273 - lilin (08/07/2012) [-]
I thought about that too, but I guess that's irrelevant because everyone is talking about how it just cut through the wood.

It could be erosion from a number of previous experiments, though.
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