Correct but that's not what I'm arguing against.
It effectively is.
It goes up a hill and keeps moving rather than stopping straight away.
Once the flat to gradient comes into play you are carrying on an effect of level motion by apllied energy pushing onto a gradient. It's almost like the spring board for that incline, if you like.
No extra energy is applied. It is nothing like a spring board.
It may be sort of constant on the flat but once that flat ends, it changes velocity
That's right, it starts slowing down as you would expect it to under mainstream science.
I am talking about a constant velocity at full thrust and then an immediate fuel cut off .
And you are yet to justify why that is needed.
Anyone knows that going up a hill in a car they have to change down a gear to keep a constant speed (assuming a steep hill) and anyone knows that the higher you go up that hill the more you have to drop down a gear until you are at first gear. All to keep a certain constant speed.
No, they don't know that the higher up you go the more you have to drop.
Your height up the hill is irrelevant to what gear you need to be in.
People know that you need to drop to a lower gear such that your car has more power at the wheels as it now needs to fight gravity.
Those that do need to shift down gears also don't typically maintain a constant speed. Instead they gradually slow down, shifting down further as they drop down.
To carry on keeping a constant speed as you go even higher in the lowest gear, you have to keep adding more gas from the pedal. All this just to keep you pushing that particular piece of road each inch.
Nope. To maintain a constant speed up a constant slope you apply the same amount of gas.
The very instant you cut power, you stop dead and start to roll back.
You do not carry on rolling up hill.
Pure bullshit.
You keep on rolling up the hill for a bit.
Am I taking on reality or am I fighting against misinformation and fantasy. That's the real question.
You are taking on reality by spreading misinformation and fantasy.
You push yourself to the floor by your own dense mass pushing it's own displaced atmosphere and that atmosphere crushes back from which the body resists by being crushed against a more dense mass (solid ground).
So is it your dense mass or is it the atmosphere pushing you down?
The same applies inside a container that is pressurised.
Yes, where if you are against a wall of a container and try pushing into the air you would be crushed back against the wall. What a shame that doesn't happen.
Your dense mass is still displacing the pressure inside and using a solid base to do so, which is the chamber floor or a chair and legs on that floor, or whatever.
Yes or "whatever", including the wall or the roof. The floor shouldn't be special in your model.
It's a slosh effect.
You failed miserably at explaining that.
Things slosh due to inertia.
Think of it like a plane full of water.
If that water is undisturbed it will stay fairly calm.
Tip the plane up or sideways or whatever and you create a friction movement of that water against the inside of the plane, or a slosh effect or a surge.
Nope. Friction has basically nothing to do with it.
It requires much more in depth explanation but isn'#t worth it until the grasp of denpressure is being understood enough to carry it on.
No, the real explanation is quite simple.
What you mean is that you require so many BS excuses to pretend it works and you are already having enough of your model torn to shreds.
Slosh effect like in the plane.
So inertia.
It's important because it's how barometers work and how everything works. It's just a case of getting your head around the different ways it does all work but with the same principles.
Except your principles don't work.
The density itself doesn't magically resist it. Instead the mass acted upon by gravity does.
No. It pushes it down the tube more against the less pressure of the atmosphere upon the mercury in the dish.
HOW???
The pressure inside the tube is practically nothing.
That is much less than the pressure of the atmosphere upon the mercury in the dish.
That means the atmosphere outside wins and should push the mercury all the way up the tube.
Simple yes but then again so is life inside this cell of Earth if you take the time to look at it from the basic lowest level.
You mean when you ignore all the complexities or try to analyse 2 things at once which shows your "simple" understanding to be pure bullshit?
the dense water tries to crush them back to their original state
What magic original state?
Now if you notice with an air bubble at the bottom of a kettle, you will see that those bubbles start to appear as small just sticking around the element
Due to surface tension.
the more the water tries to crush the more expanded molecules in those air bubbles and you see them as large bubbling and popping bubbles, or boiling water.
And when it is boiling do you know what is inside those bubbles? WATER!!!
There's no need for fictional forces like gravity and such.
No, there is no need for fictional garbage like denspressure, which you have failed to explain even simple things with.
Meanwhile gravity works fine without all your convoluted nonsense.