"DSK"  wrote in message ..  .
| |  ... I say any prop
|  |  that boils water is useless as a prop
|  |
|  | If that were all it did, then you'd be totally correct.
|  | However, under the specific circumstances, any propellor
|  | will boil water.
|
| Paladin wrote:
|  The specific circumstances would have to be enough electricity
|  running through the prop to heat it up like the element in an
|  electric water heater.
| 
|
| Is electricity the only thing in the universe which will
| produce heat?
No but it's the only thing on earth I know of that has the ability to cause a propeller attached
to a yacht to boil water.
|
|  |
|  | When people who live in the mountains make their tea and/or
|  | coffee, do they boil their water or does the lower
|  | atmospheric pressure mean that they are "vaporizing" it?
|
|
| Paladin wrote:
|  They are adding heat only so they are boiling it.
|
| What about the energy expended in carrying it up the
| mountainside?
What if it came down the mountain stream? Your question
and mine are equally nonsensical as neither are part of
the equation.
|
|
|  .... The lower
|  atmospheric pressure only means they are able to boil water
|  usling fewer BTUs because the boiling point temp is lowered.
| 
|
| Hmm... and heat is energy... so therefor, if a propellor
| adds energy to the water, and by doing so lowers the
| pressure enough that the boiling point temp is lowered....
Boiling temp. There's that boil word again. You're still guilty
of using a word that means to add heat. You can combine it
with another word but that doesn't change the meaning of
the word boil. As I argued with Gilligan, and he finally concurred,
a propeller does not add enough heat to the water to boil it. It
only lowers pressure in some cases enough to vaporize water and
cause cavitation, so to say a propeller boils water is just plain wrong
according to the definition of the verb "to boil".
| 
|  They cannot! The definition of the verb "to boil" precludes it.
| 
|
| Read it again! You're missing something, just like you
| missed something in the two earlier examples I gave.
|
| BTW I can think of a simple test to prove you are or are not
| the CraptonŽ. Explain, in your own words, the term 'hull speed.'
For a displacement boat, a heavy deep-keel boat, the maximum speed a given hull can attain from wind power is called "hull speed" 
and is largely dependent on the waterline length of the boat. Hull speed is expressed as 1.34 X the square root of LWL, or length of 
waterline. If a cruising sailboat has a waterline length of 36 feet, she should be able to sail 1.34 x 6, or approximately eight 
knots.
http://www.sailnet.com/collections/a...leid=colgat006
Paladin 
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