I wanted them to explain Arnie's more aged appearance in T3 -perhaps by saying that the living tissue ages at a faster rate than a normal human and that ordinarily they would be reskinned or something.
Then again if you believe the Sarah Connor Chronicles the living tissue has advanced healing capabilities (you never got to see it in the films because each Terminator was destroyed shortly after) and thus surely would also be capable of rejuvenating all by itself.
Anyway, I've kinda brought this up before but does anyone think the T-800 in T2 seemed unduly weakened by the T-1000 in the steel mill? It seems all the T-1000 did was knock him into a few walls, force him to have his hand torn off, beat him about with a pole and then ram him with a steel beam - twice in the torso, twice in the head. Aren't the endoskeletons designed to take these kind of impacts? Should that have been enough to have the T-800 crawling? Or should we just let it be that T1 and T2 dictate the amount of battering they can take and completely and utterly forget about T3 and T4.
Then again if you believe the Sarah Connor Chronicles the living tissue has advanced healing capabilities (you never got to see it in the films because each Terminator was destroyed shortly after) and thus surely would also be capable of rejuvenating all by itself.
Anyway, I've kinda brought this up before but does anyone think the T-800 in T2 seemed unduly weakened by the T-1000 in the steel mill? It seems all the T-1000 did was knock him into a few walls, force him to have his hand torn off, beat him about with a pole and then ram him with a steel beam - twice in the torso, twice in the head. Aren't the endoskeletons designed to take these kind of impacts? Should that have been enough to have the T-800 crawling? Or should we just let it be that T1 and T2 dictate the amount of battering they can take and completely and utterly forget about T3 and T4.