So basically everyone on this wiki knows from what we’ve witnessed of ol’ Willy getting springlocked, you basically have animatronic parts impale you from just about every area in the body, and your bones apparently “turn to dust” and you’ll die either immediately or if you’re unlucky like William, after several minutes in excruciating pain.
But what I don’t get is how one’s bones would “turn to dust”. How and why the hell does the suit destroy human bones almost effortlessly? That would mean either:
A. the springs that put the endoskeleton back into place are extremely strong springs so when the springlocks are loose everything in the suit retracts with high speed and heavy force.
B. the animatronic endoskeleton parts would have to be super heavy and/or pointy.
The endoskeleton parts however couldn’t be super heavy as the user of the suit has to be able to move their joints in it (unless if the springlock suits are like spartan armor in halo where the mechanisms do the movement for the user). So more realistically the components and suit would have to be a specially designed endoskeleton that’s lightweight and nimble, and the only way it could injure you then is if the endoskeleton has small yet sharp pieces impaling you.
But the springs couldn’t be THAT strong (unless like I said the suit does that movements because it’s too heavy for the user to move therefore stronger springs would be needed.) but in order to fit both an adult and an animatronic endoskeleton inside, the suit would probably be very large and chunky (would make sense for Fredbear being a large and chunky bear, but spring Bonnie appears more similar in size and shape of an average adult human, so like I said earlier, spring Bonnie would have to have a specially designed endoskeleton to appear that way.) But realistically strong springs wouldn’t be necessary and would probably be a big safety issue. So the only reason the springs would be that strong for it’s design is if someone or something INTENTIONALLY made them that way. (Perhaps Henry or the souls of the kids rigged the suit like that because they knew William would probably reach for it…)
So in reality I feel if you were to be springlocked I feel the most realistic injuries would have to be the suit pinching your skin because it’s pressing tightly against you, and maybe if the parts are sharp enough maybe you might break through skin or have cuts. But bones turning to dust sounds ridiculous.