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Everything posted by wolfy
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You've been up there to see this have you, or did you read a science book that told you this.
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In answer to your first question, the person who caught the ball/Elephant would be carried along with it. Your second question ,' Newtons cradle' in the vacuum of space, assuming space is as we are told and assuming you are releasing one of the balls to crash into the rest assume it would hit them , pushing them all forward and all the wires would end up tangled to hell until they could tangle no more, stopping the force applied.
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I've tried crossfit dressing but only when our lass goes to the town like. I used to sneak some of her gear when I went midnight boxing training, on my own. I'd have her high heels on, stockings, a tight nob and ball hugging short skirt on and a low cut blouse, make up and a wig. I'd be skipping away looking at myself in a full length mirror, admiring my new look. Sometimes it got too much and I'd turn my back on the mirror, twisting my head round to look back at my tight arse, whilst pulling the end off it. The things you do when your younger eh.
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Well tell Christmas Tree that because he started the thread.
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You start by packing his trunk.
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The Elephant would move simply by the spring of his arms.
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Why?No one is asking you to take part in it, it's your choice to look, contribute or not.
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I agree up to the water escaping the hose. Once that nozzle is open, the water then hits the atmosphere at force. This is where scientists are clever at fucking with people's minds to have them believe something that just isn't true. I'd never call anyone stupid for believing it because most don't question it, or even know how stuff works anyway. Take the same hose but under a quarter of the pressure. The fireman (Sam) , opens the nozzle and sees the water come out and hit the deck, basically like us having a piss. It doesn't push him back or push on the hose much because it's hitting the atmosphere slowly and falling to the deck with gravity force. Turn up the pressure and it now defies gravity by that force and the water fights its way through the air, pushing the air out of the way but in doing so, it's compressing the air directly in front of the water jet which in turn is pushing back on it. Think of it like a bike pump. If you push down on a bike pump in the air, it's easy to do because you are pushing air into air. If you try and do it fast, you find that you compress the air far more than can be ejected from the small hole, meaning it creates resistance against your hand, acting like a shock absorber if you like. If I was to put my finger over the hole and you pressed down on the pump, it would want to spring back up against you because your strength cannot compress the air any more. If you were to do this in a vacuum, it wouldn't matter if I had my finger on the end or not because you could push that handle right down as it has no air to compress. Equally in the vacuum, if you pressed down fast on that handle, it would go down very fast and create nothing because there is no pressure to create. If you were to fill that same pump with air, then slam down the handle expelling the air into a vacuum, the vacuum would create no resistance to it, nor would it compress, because there's nothing to compress , all that would happen is, the vacuum would swallow up IMMEDIATELY and air inside the pump.
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The hose is working under pressure due to a pump, so putting it under water will not make it stop, unless it was under sufficient weight of water that nullifies the strength of that pump/pressure.
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The water is working against the hose because it's hitting the pressure of the atmosphere, propelling it backwards. The only way to stop that, is to have something or a larger force acting against it, which would be the fireman.
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The Sun does move.
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and why do you think the water is working against the hose?
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I'll try and explain is as best I can. We have to assume a human can be in the vacuum of space. Give him a medicine ball and tell him to throw that medicine ball away from himself. Once he throws it...that medicine ball flies off into space at whatever speed he threw it and with no resistance, it will continue to do so until acted upon by some other force. Because he's thrown that medicine ball forward, the spring of his arms have provided the momentum, yet because there is no resistance to that ball, and space wants to swallow it , it creates no opposite reaction to him, so he stays put. On Earth, if he threw the same medicine ball whilst stood on ice skates..the weight of the ball , pushing against the atmosphere, plus the downward gravity, would push him back slightly , depending on how much force he put into the throw, A for instance: Let's say you had a wide sheet of ply wood and you went to hit your mate on the side of the head with it , for some reason but you decided to just slowly swing the board towards him. You would feel a slight resistance against the atmosphere but you would hit him without any problem. Do the same thing but this time take your hardest swing at him and what happens? Either you will lose control of the board before it hits him, due to the speed you are hitting the atmosphere around you, or by the time it gets to him, the atmosphere has slowed it down to virtually nothing because your body strength wouldn't be enough to overcome the force acting on that board. People are just told that the atmosphere has no effect but it does and it should be obvious..yet people have been taught to think otherwise because they have been amazed by the science and bamboozled by the maths that supposedly back it all up.
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I know I'm right on this one. Why you think the hose is working against itself and not the atmosphere is a mystery to me.
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I don't know how a meteor gets into motion and neither do you.
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Like the fire mans hose. It will stay still on Earth when pressurised , until he opens the nozzle. Then it will react against him, pushing the water out one way and pushing him back the other way.The reason for this is because it's pushing against atmospheric pressure at speed. If it was possible for him to do the same thing in a vacuum of space, the water would be expelled into nothing and against nothing, creating no reaction against him.
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If space is what they say it is, which is , no ,up , down, or any way of knowing what is up or down, plus the fact that you float as we are told , and is a vacuum, then nothing moves in it, UNLESS crashed into by something. For instance, a meteor crashing into something that is still.
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There is no more "and"...that's it, plain and simple. They burn fuel to propel themselves.
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Nah, not rattled. I just don;t like arseholes asking for bans and bringing shite up to encourage it. So the easiest thing for me to do is ignore.
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The rocket is one thing and the fuel is another..correct. If rockets flew by not expelling their fuel , then I'd say, " you know what, I was wrong"...the problem is, rockets do expel their fuel and they do this because it's the only way they can propel themselves.
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Right, on that note, MR frustration, don't bother responding to me from this post on, you are getting binned.
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I'm not certain it's a vacuum.
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It's not basic science at all, it's basic bullshit but some of you just prefer to go with what you are told. No object can push against itself without an outside force aiding it. Think about it, it's basic logic.
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Rikko.Newtons law works on Earth, it does Jack shit in a vacuum of space.
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Look it up when you aren't on a phone, there's no rush.