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On Tue, 15 May 2007 19:11:04 +1000, "d&tm" wrote in :
Calculating the lift is really not that difficult. And even if you cant calculate it , how hard is it so simply measure the lift of a single balloon on a scale to determine how many balloons are requried to lift the desired payload. I remember doing this my 10 year old daughter using party balloons and a kitchen scale. I recall we calculated about 5000 party balloons were required to lift a small person. http://www.mythbustersfanclub.com/mb...nt/view/61/27/ Mythbusters miscalculated and didn't explain why their calculations were off. They thought 1700 would lift 40 pounds. It took ~3500 to get the effect they sought. One guess: they were conservative in filling the balloons on the day of the test and didn't put as much gas in each balloon (on average) as they did in the lab. Or there was some weight in the tethers they used that they didn't factor into their prediction. Marty -- Big-8 newsgroups: humanities.*, misc.*, news.*, rec.*, sci.*, soc.*, talk.* See http://www.big-8.org for info on how to add or remove newsgroups. |
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