Yes I did search.
Edited by Mas Ketchup, 17 March 2009 - 10:25 PM.
Posted 17 March 2009 - 10:22 PM
Edited by Mas Ketchup, 17 March 2009 - 10:25 PM.
Posted 17 March 2009 - 10:27 PM
yeah I'm that guy who made that cool thing with the cool paint.
Posted 17 March 2009 - 10:34 PM
Edited by cheesypiza001, 18 March 2009 - 12:46 AM.
Posted 17 March 2009 - 10:53 PM
Edited by Doom, 17 March 2009 - 10:55 PM.
Posted 17 March 2009 - 11:20 PM
Posted 17 March 2009 - 11:42 PM
Posted 18 March 2009 - 12:08 AM
For example, If you are trying to broil water in order to cook pasta, you would not want to use a 4 gallon pot to broil 6 cups of water. There would be lots empty space that would time for the heat to fill. However, if you were to use a smaller pot, the water would broil faster due to the lesser volume of the pot which would allow it to get hotter faster. I am pretty sure that this example is true. If it is not a good example to use here, please notify me and I will remove it.
Edited by KingBouyah, 18 March 2009 - 12:25 AM.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 12:25 AM
Posted 18 March 2009 - 12:44 AM
For example, If you are trying to broil water in order to cook pasta, you would not want to use a 4 gallon pot to broil 6 cups of water. There would be lots empty space that would time for the heat to fill. However, if you were to use a smaller pot, the water would broil faster due to the lesser volume of the pot which would allow it to get hotter faster. I am pretty sure that this example is true. If it is not a good example to use here, please notify me and I will remove it.
More or less true, but in practical terms almost completely irrelevant, because the difference would amount to at most a few seconds out of several minutes. And the weight (technically, the thermal mass) of a pot -which is what matters- is not all that directly related to the capacity. But it is hilarious, not the least because of your consistent use of the entirely wrong word. Broiling is the application of radiant heat from above, pretty much the worst possible choice for boiling water in a pot.
For example, If you are trying to broil water in order to cook pasta, you would not want to use a 4 gallon pot to broil 6 cups of water. There would be lots empty space that would time for the heat to fill. However, if you were to use a smaller pot, the water would broil faster due to the lesser volume of the pot which would allow it to get hotter faster. I am pretty sure that this example is true. If it is not a good example to use here, please notify me and I will remove it.
Yeah, bad example. Because specific heat is still the same and if anything it would boil faster in a bigger pot because it's shallow, meaning there's less pressure to overcome as the vapor pressure of the water at the bottom of the pot increases at the heat source. In short, I see no correlation to Nerf.
And as far as broiling water is concerned, you've been browsing Engrish.com for far too long.
Edited by cheesypiza001, 18 March 2009 - 12:45 AM.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 12:45 AM
For example, If you are trying to broil water in order to cook pasta, you would not want to use a 4 gallon pot to broil 6 cups of water. There would be lots empty space that would time for the heat to fill. However, if you were to use a smaller pot, the water would broil faster due to the lesser volume of the pot which would allow it to get hotter faster. I am pretty sure that this example is true. If it is not a good example to use here, please notify me and I will remove it.
Yeah, bad example. Because specific heat is still the same and if anything it would boil faster in a bigger pot because it's shallow, meaning there's less pressure to overcome as the vapor pressure of the water at the bottom of the pot increases at the heat source. In short, I see no correlation to Nerf.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 10:50 AM
I'm thinking of something else, then. I really ought to run something like this through CFX and see if I can't come up with a quantifiable answer. Everyone's just figuring things out by trial and error right now.What you're missing there is a premise with any validity whatsoever. Air is compressible, and the "velocities and pressures" of nerf don't even come close to providing any reason why anything else should be imagined.
Edited by Daniel Beaver, 18 March 2009 - 02:34 PM.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 11:37 AM
I'm no engineer, and this isn't exactly the answer, but the engineering toolbox should help a little. This explains a little bit what minor loss coefficients are, specifically look at those for inlets, and you'll kind of get an idea of what restricts air flow and what doesn't.
Edited by Doom, 18 March 2009 - 11:40 AM.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 09:28 PM
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