I honestly can't work out why you try to prop up denpressure.
And, as ever, I don't. I just tend to prefer when people make honest, informed arguments. But as you've ignored it the countless times I've explained that to you, I expect you'll ignore it this time too, just like you ignore anything related to FET.
I expect explanations to have some connection with reality -
denpressure doesn't - end of story.
You have absolutely no understanding of anything any FEer says, and you apparently have a religious objection to gaining any degree of understanding.
That is completely untrue, but when it comes to
denpressure or
DET I can never get an answer, so what am I to do?
I simply cannot comprehend any of Sceppy's explanations of what could cause weight.
The name "denpressure" seems to imply that "pressure" causes "weight", but apparently it doesn't, so what does.
I have asked Sceppy about the change of weight when a person is
under high pressure in a diving bell or working in a caisson or (in fact a person weight slightly less - due to buoyancy).
under low pressure in a high aircraft or on say, Mt Everest.
I never get a straight answer. It's always som evasive crap about our man-made scales unable to make such measurements.
So to clarify things I ask for simple numerical answers, at which point he raves on about being indoctrinated.
All you are doing is making REers look like morons with how often you have to resort to such idiocy.
No, that would be you!
You don't make yourself look smart when you go off on those little tirades against denpressure and the like,
I'm not trying to "make myself look smart"! But where are these tirades?
you make anyone that knows the model
Just who "knows the model" except Sceppy and possibly you.
ignore every word you have to say, because you are acting like an expert when you apparently don't grasp the simplest concept.
I have seen no "simplest concept" when it comes to denpressure - at least nothing that makes sense, or isn't that required?
(eg: treating denpressure, the explanation for gravity, as equivalent to the pressure per unit area caused by gravity).
Well, YOU TELL me how you
calculate the weight of an object using
denpressure under various conditions of pressure, etc.
And if pressure does not cause weight why on earth did Sceppy call it
denpressure?
You are the expert so answer me these:
A person weighs 80 kg at sea level under normal pressure of about 14.7 psi:
Find the change of weight of that person when
working in a caisson at 50 psi - does the higher pressure change the weight,
on the top of Mt Everest at an altitude of 29,029 ft and an air pressure of 4.9 psi.
And find the weight (allowing for buoyancy) three 10 x 10 x 10 cm cubes,
one of solid nylon (density 1,150 kg/m
3),
one of aluminium (density 2,700 kg/m
3) and
one of gold (density 19,300 kg/m
3)
under normal air pressure and under a near perfect vacuum.
I do understand that you might be busy, so explain to me how to do this sort of calcilation.
If denpressure cannot be used to make real world calculations, it is worthless.
At least UA does permit calculations like this.