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#1
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dixon wrote:
Now, here's where the troubling part comes in. Lets say the back of the tank, instead of being 72" away from the front is moved forward until it is just 1/8 of an inch away from the front glass. Now there is less than two gallons of water in the tank. I have trouble seeing the glass (3/4 in. thick) bowing from 2,500 lbs of "push" from less than two gallons of water(16 lbs). I suppose we could even shrink the 1/8 in. to a few thousandths and put a thimble of water in. Would there still be 2,500 lbs of outward force from a gram or two of water? Would the heavy duty scale across the room be forced all the way to the two thousand, five hundred pound mark? Here's my theory: As you decreased the distance between front and back, and the front galss bowed out, the volume of the tank would increase and the water depth would lower, decreasing the water pressure on the glass. Water depth and density determine the water pressure. |
#2
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![]() "John Wentworth" wrote in message ... dixon wrote: Now, here's where the troubling part comes in. Lets say the back of the tank, instead of being 72" away from the front is moved forward until it is just 1/8 of an inch away from the front glass. Now there is less than two gallons of water in the tank. I have trouble seeing the glass (3/4 in. thick) bowing from 2,500 lbs of "push" from less than two gallons of water(16 lbs). I suppose we could even shrink the 1/8 in. to a few thousandths and put a thimble of water in. Would there still be 2,500 lbs of outward force from a gram or two of water? Would the heavy duty scale across the room be forced all the way to the two thousand, five hundred pound mark? Here's my theory: As you decreased the distance between front and back, and the front galss bowed out, the volume of the tank would increase and the water depth would lower, decreasing the water pressure on the glass. Water depth and density determine the water pressure. Even with bowing you would still fill the tank to the top, it would just take slightly more water. Dixon |
#3
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Here's my theory:
As you decreased the distance between front and back, and the front galss bowed out, the volume of the tank would increase and the water depth would lower, decreasing the water pressure on the glass. The relationship is between depth and pressure. If you built a tank that was a mile long and a mile wide, but six inches deep, you would need glass thick enough to support the water pressure associated with a six-inch depth. One has to remember that, assuming the tank is level, there is equal pressure on all the vertical structures containing the water, not just the front glass. As the tank expands in length or width, the amount of vertical structure to contain the water increases correspondingly, and continues to support its share of the pressure. |
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