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tapkoote

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Posts posted by tapkoote

  1. It depends on how the gauge is calibrated but the force might be a good deal more than that.

    What does the gauge read when there's no vacuum? is it about 0 or about 30?

     

    Normal air pressure is about 30 inches of mercury.

    If you reduce the pressure to 5 inches then there is a 25 inch difference- that's 25/30 times atmospheric pressure.

    Normal air pressure is about 15 PSI so 15*25/30 =12.5 pounds per square inch.

    1200 square inches of area means 1200 * 12.5 =15000 pounds of force. That's not a couple of big guys standing on it, that's the weight of a couple of small trucks parked on it.

     

    thank you John

    I'm sure these guys use gauge pressure

    because they speak of holding 25 to 28 inches for 4 hours on model air plane wings and the pump I want to use isn't capable of more than 5 inches hg

    I'm sure if they used absolute pressure it would crush the styrofoam

    Thanks for the help

    Pat

    PS think I'll test it on a coffee can first

  2. I'm a retired hobbyist, with a basic under standing of math, science, physics

    I want to glue a thin wood veneer on to deck of a radio controlled hydroplane. I want to clamp it with a clear plastic vacuum bag system. the hull is giber glass but basically hollow. The pump will produce 5 "hg, just under 2 1/2 pounds per square inch. this is the part I can't get my mind around. The hull is 50" X 24", lets say 1200 square inches. At a half pound per square inch, am I applying 600 pounds of force to all sides of the hull?

    Thats like having two great big guys stand on my little boat.

    I've tried other forums, hope you can help.

    Tap

     

    magdeburg.gifOtto von Guericke, (1602-1686), a German physicist, born in Magdeburg, performed a famous experiment: the "Magdeburg Hemispheres".

    These were two halves of a large, hollow metal ball. When all the air was sucked out of the ball, two teams of eight horses couldn't pull them apart, because the pressure of the Earth's atmosphere created a very large force on the ball.

    You may have seen a smaller version of this experiment in school.

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