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What are paintballs made of???

L J

big big titties
Originally posted by IanC
Yeah, I think if we go back to the non-newtonian liquids blah blah, provided you don't break the suface tension then you are ok. If your in it up to your chest and nobody throws you a rope i'm pretty sure it ain't gonna matter whatever you do!! :eek:

On a dfifferent theme, apparently you can drown in gin, as its impossible to swim in!


much like the bermuda triangle where all the methane bubbles make the water so un-dense (does that word exist?:D) that everything sinks
 

IanC

Active Member
Jan 24, 2003
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Searching for the pro-tour....:S
Originally posted by Skeetmaster
So what is itabout gin that makes it impossible to swim in? Maybe i could understand a carbonated liquid, but gin is alcahol...and a liquid...over 50% water so...hmm...needs backup that does (not disputing it, but need more info)
Dunno, heard it somewhere, was hoping some clever type could explain it to me!!!!

Maybe i'll look it up when i'm next bored! ( about 9.15 monday morning probably!;) :D )
 

le-pig

the brotherhood
May 16, 2002
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Originally posted by L J
i thought the more you move in quick sand, the faster you sink...:confused:
only if you are vertical,horazontaly(spelling) you spread the surface area
lj
surely methane bubbles would cling to you and help you float,as i thought methane was lighter;) :D :D
 

L J

big big titties
Originally posted by le-pig
only if you are vertical,horazontaly(spelling) you spread the surface area
lj
surely methane bubbles would cling to you and help you float,as i thought methane was lighter;) :D :D
because there are so many bubbles, it makes lots of holes in the water (not sure how to put that) and this makes it less dense, so ship merely sink . it doesnt have to actually be methane, i sa an experiment just using air bubbles and they sank a boat. its only methane because the tubers at the bottom of the ocean make them. planes also crash because the methane/air bubbles rise into the atmosphere at mess around with the engines.

there we go. the bermuda triangle is unleashed
 

DarWood

Dagenham Swarm
Nov 30, 2002
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Im doing college work anyways guys and dug this up for ya.

"In an article in the Sunday Times, Norman Miller has stated that the conditions responsible for the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle ( which lies between the West Indies islands and the south-eastern coast of USA could provide the answer to the world’s energy crisis. The energy source is methane gas and there are no alien spaceships or suburbs of Atlantis here. The myth of the Bermuda Triangle, the mysterious disappearances and strange events, has generated much interest all over the world through the years. Charles Berlitz’s book on the subject, published in 1974, sold nearly 20 million copies in 30 languages. Ships, boats, and even aeroplanes are all said to have disappeared in this area and all the mystery has been attributed to extraterrestrials. But scientists now have an explanation for these phenomena and the cause is not extraterrestrial but chemical. It goes by the name of methane gas hydrate, which is methane (created by decomposing organic debris) that has been entombed in an ice crystalline. Conditions are ideal for the formation of this gas in areas of permafrost. Another area is the deep sea floor where the pressure and the temperature are right for the creation of this gas.

It was only in 1981 that a geochemist, Richard McIver, went public on a link between methane gas blowouts and the Bermuda Triangle myth. He stated that massive landslides often occur along the North American continental shelf, which lies to the north of the Bermuda Triangle. Such land slumps can occur over a large area bringing down huge boulders which rupture the layer of gas hydrate beneath the sea floor, freeing the gas that is trapped beneath the hydrate ‘cap’ and also liberating huge amounts of methane trapped within the hydrate itself. The moment a methane gas pocket ruptures a vast reservoir of gas suddenly surges from the seabed, rising up in a huge plume before erupting on the surface within seconds and without warning. A ship caught in such a blowout would be doomed; the water beneath it would suddenly become much less dense, sinking it in a matter of moments. The vessel would plunge into the depths, where it would be covered as sediment disturbed by the blow out settles back on the sea floor. In fact, planes too could fall prey to such a deadly fallout.

The US geological Survey has estimated that just two small areas off the coasts of North and South Carolina, which are a part of the Bermuda Triangle, contain about 70 times the quantity of gas consumed annually in USA. The sea bed and the areas of permafrost are therefore storehouses of a great energy source. It has been estimated that just 1% of gas hydrate is equivalent to half the present conventional gas reserves. But the bad news is that methane is a greenhouse gas and it is vulnerable to blowouts when drillings go wrong. It is only stable under narrow temperature and pressure conditions and would decay due to global warming. We will have to wait and see whether it gives us energy to burn or it burns us up instead! "

Now back to college work :(

Darren :)
 

le-pig

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May 16, 2002
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lj

you mean displacment causing a vacume,still wont work if the bubbles are lighter than air and breaking on the hull(added lift) will keep the vessel up
 

DarWood

Dagenham Swarm
Nov 30, 2002
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Dude i saw it too on discovery channel or sumthing. It took the geezer 3 attempts to sink a speed boat. But at a certain displacement and the right amount of methane (based on exiting methane from shifting techtonic plates) the dude sure enough sunk it. It only needs to be done in enough time to to sink the boat low enough to take on water and bye, bye.

In easier terms its like taking water from under a boat and leaving nothing but air. The boat drops due to it being heavier than air and the surrounding water is thrown on board.

Damn to much college work :D

Cya!
Darren ;)
 

Skeet

Platinum Member
The reason behind it is that the bubble has a large surface are, but is full of nothing: ie, not water..now, get a large container, fill it with marbles...these marbles are your gas bubbles....now, fill with water, till the marbles are covered, now float a little boat on top...it floats..ok..now...pour the water out into a jug...empty the marbles out...bung the water back in....does it reach anywhere near the top? Where is you boat gonna float now?So what happens is....the boat needs the water to keep it afloat, but the water is made up of lots of gaps, so really there i sod all water there, so the boat sinks.