Tron Wiki
(Undo revision 24269 by 65.191.253.113 (talk)Unnecessary to reinforce the following paragraph. Flynn's age is directly linked to his real world age.)
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[[Kevin Flynn]] mentions that a '''millicycle''' is about 8 hours. The metric prefix "milli" denotes one thousandth, which would mean that a cycle is about 8,000 hours (for comparison an Earthly year, by the [[wikipedia:Gregorian calendar|Gregorian calendar]], is about 8,760 hours (twenty-four times three-hundred-and-sixty-five)). But that measure is speculative and non-canonical. For more info on possible time measurement, see Kevin Flynn's [http://tron.wikia.com/wiki/Kevin_Flynn#Flynn.27s_Chronological_Age.2FContinuity_of_Existence] page.
 
[[Kevin Flynn]] mentions that a '''millicycle''' is about 8 hours. The metric prefix "milli" denotes one thousandth, which would mean that a cycle is about 8,000 hours (for comparison an Earthly year, by the [[wikipedia:Gregorian calendar|Gregorian calendar]], is about 8,760 hours (twenty-four times three-hundred-and-sixty-five)). But that measure is speculative and non-canonical. For more info on possible time measurement, see Kevin Flynn's [http://tron.wikia.com/wiki/Kevin_Flynn#Flynn.27s_Chronological_Age.2FContinuity_of_Existence] page.
   
{|align="right" border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4 style="background:#111; border:1px solid #088fb1; width:220px; text-align:center;"
+
{|align="right" border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4 style="background:#111; border:1px solid #088fb1; width:290px; text-align:center;"
 
| style="background:#001F33; border-bottom:1px solid #088fb1;" | '''Cycles'''
 
| style="background:#001F33; border-bottom:1px solid #088fb1;" | '''Cycles'''
  +
| style="background:#001F33; border-bottom:1px solid #088fb1;" | '''Grid Time'''
 
| style="background:#001F33; border-bottom:1px solid #088fb1;" | '''Real Time'''
 
| style="background:#001F33; border-bottom:1px solid #088fb1;" | '''Real Time'''
 
|-
 
|-
|49.999999994064
+
|49.9999
  +
|1,000 years
 
|1 year
 
|1 year
 
|-
 
|-
 
|1.0
 
|1.0
  +
|20 years
 
|7.3 days
 
|7.3 days
 
|-
 
|-
  +
|0.13698
|0.1369863013536
 
  +
|2.73972 years
 
|1 day
 
|1 day
 
|-
 
|-
  +
|0.00570
|0.0057077625564
 
  +
|5.93 weeks or 41.66 days
 
|1 hour
 
|1 hour
 
|-
 
|-
  +
|0.00009
|0.00009512937594
 
  +
|16.99 hours
 
|1 minute
 
|1 minute
 
|-
 
|-
  +
|0.0000015
|0.000001585489599
 
  +
|16.99 minutes
 
|1 second
 
|1 second
 
|}
 
|}
The specially released [[TRON: Legacy The Official Movie Magazine|''TRON: Legacy'' tie-in magazine guide]] includes a timeline of the [[Grid]], explaining that time moves faster in the system because its only limit is the speed at which electrons can move in circuitry. The guide states that one year in the real world equals about 50 Cycles in the Grid, which would mean that Kevin Flynn was trapped inside the Grid for roughly 1,000 years from his viewpoint. This would seem to be confirmed within the movie itself by [[Castor|Castor's]] line that [[Clu 2|Clu]] had been trying to obtain [[Kevin Flynn's Identity Disc]] for about 1,000 cycles.
+
The specially released [[TRON: Legacy The Official Movie Magazine|''TRON: Legacy'' tie-in magazine guide]] includes a timeline of the [[Grid]], explaining that time moves faster in the system because its only limit is the speed at which electrons can move in circuitry. The guide states that one year in the real world equals about 50 Cycles in the Grid, which would mean that Kevin Flynn was trapped inside the Grid for roughly 20,000 years from his viewpoint. This would seem to be confirmed within the movie itself by [[Castor|Castor's]] line that [[Clu 2|Clu]] had been trying to obtain [[Kevin Flynn's Identity Disc]] for about 1,000 cycles.
   
 
According to mathematical calculations done by TRON community fans, a more precise number has been achieved using the ''TRON: Legacy'' tie-in magazine guide as a basis. Going on the basis that 50 cycles on the grid is one year in real time, the other numbers can be extrapolated, as shown in the table to the right.
 
According to mathematical calculations done by TRON community fans, a more precise number has been achieved using the ''TRON: Legacy'' tie-in magazine guide as a basis. Going on the basis that 50 cycles on the grid is one year in real time, the other numbers can be extrapolated, as shown in the table to the right.

Revision as of 23:34, 22 January 2012

Long time.

—Sam Flynn

You have no idea...

—Kevin Flynn

A Cycle (also known as a Tron Cycle or TC) is a measurement of time used in the Grid. Interpreting the dialogue of TRON: Legacy, a cycle is a fair amount of time, roughly equivalent to a year.

Kevin Flynn mentions that a millicycle is about 8 hours. The metric prefix "milli" denotes one thousandth, which would mean that a cycle is about 8,000 hours (for comparison an Earthly year, by the Gregorian calendar, is about 8,760 hours (twenty-four times three-hundred-and-sixty-five)). But that measure is speculative and non-canonical. For more info on possible time measurement, see Kevin Flynn's [1] page.

Cycles Grid Time Real Time
49.9999 1,000 years 1 year
1.0 20 years 7.3 days
0.13698 2.73972 years 1 day
0.00570 5.93 weeks or 41.66 days 1 hour
0.00009 16.99 hours 1 minute
0.0000015 16.99 minutes 1 second

The specially released TRON: Legacy tie-in magazine guide includes a timeline of the Grid, explaining that time moves faster in the system because its only limit is the speed at which electrons can move in circuitry. The guide states that one year in the real world equals about 50 Cycles in the Grid, which would mean that Kevin Flynn was trapped inside the Grid for roughly 20,000 years from his viewpoint. This would seem to be confirmed within the movie itself by Castor's line that Clu had been trying to obtain Kevin Flynn's Identity Disc for about 1,000 cycles.

According to mathematical calculations done by TRON community fans, a more precise number has been achieved using the TRON: Legacy tie-in magazine guide as a basis. Going on the basis that 50 cycles on the grid is one year in real time, the other numbers can be extrapolated, as shown in the table to the right.

Notes

  • An Intel 8086 Processor circa 1980 has about 8MHz which equals out to about 8 million cycles a second.

See Also