Yeah. His punch was more angular than straight-down. I still doubt it would've effected things because my rough knowledge of physics tells me this, and Christopher and either clarify what I want to say or correct me.
Ok, the higher altitude you're at the more "energy" you have. So in order for the car to be launched up energy has to be added to it. Enough energy to take a 3000lb car and launch it up into the air five or so feet. A 5000lb weight can't do that and the inertia from the back of the car still trying to move certainly can't do that because the car starts losing energy rapidly as soon as it stops moving. The back only lifts up because it's trying to still move toward the front of the car that can't happen so it bounces up a bit, all of this is also effected by the suspension in the car.
So it'd be -from my understanding- impossible to launch the car in and flip it in the air because that'd require adding a lot more energy into the car than can be provided either by the sharply declining momentum of the car and the Hellboy punch.
But how do you get 500 schoolkids to be active participants in either of those rather than just spectators?
Well... You can't. But! How about this:
I'm not satisfied they did the "Breakstep Bridge" myth right from way back in the first season.
To recap: The "myth" is that there's some bridges where soldiers are required to break the step of their march -so they're all walking out of step from one another- the idea being that the rhythm of several hundred soldiers all walking in unison in a particular way would match the resonance frequency of the bridge and cause it to collapse.
Jamie and Adam built a scale bridge out of, like, aluminum and plastic or something and tried making various soldiers using these motorized actuators (donated to them by a fan, motors I still see show up on the show to this day) and later by making a single, large, "soldier." In both cases the heavy, out of scale in size and weight soldier(s) simply just shook the bridge into failure. Not by resonance or vibration but just more by shaking and shifting weight on it too much. If Godzilla stood on the Brooklyn Bridge and started bouncing up and down on his knees while swinging his arms the bridge would probably fail too. Not because Godzilla's movements were matching the "resonance frequency" of the bridge but because he was just shaking the hell out of it.
You have a couple hundred kids Obama wants you to use in a myth. Boom. Revisit a myth from the first season you never really tackled very well int he first place (it was one of their first episodes so they're forgiven.) Safety? You say? Bah!
..
Ok, fine.
I'm sure there's plenty of ways they could've tested this and done it in a safe manner.
There. Problem. Solved.
It's an interesting myth that was never solved or tested properly.
It's one of their first myths so maybe in need of a revisit due to their change of operations and their better adoption of the Scientific Method.
It's a myth to test properly they'd need several subjects.
It's a myth that'd satisfy, some, scientific curiosity.
I'm awesome.
You're welcome.
