wittgenst3in
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2004
- Messages
- 379
I was thinking the other day about a problem involving pumps. Many pumps, even industrial ones that cost $40k+ can't prime themselves, meaning if they're full of air they can't suck water up to get started. Also many can't pump from a tank any lower than about a meter below them.
In fact there is a limit as to how high you can suck stuff up to. Since the most suction is acchieved if you have a perfect vacuum in one end of the pipe, and their is going to be one atmosphere of pressure on the water at the other end, you can't suck water up more than about 10 meters.
So I was thinking, if you got a fluid that dosen't vaporise easily, and then filled a bucket with a hose and ran the sealed end of the hose higher than 10m you would end up with a near-perfect vacuum in that end of the hose. Does this sound like a practical way of creating a vacuum to anyone else?
In fact there is a limit as to how high you can suck stuff up to. Since the most suction is acchieved if you have a perfect vacuum in one end of the pipe, and their is going to be one atmosphere of pressure on the water at the other end, you can't suck water up more than about 10 meters.
So I was thinking, if you got a fluid that dosen't vaporise easily, and then filled a bucket with a hose and ran the sealed end of the hose higher than 10m you would end up with a near-perfect vacuum in that end of the hose. Does this sound like a practical way of creating a vacuum to anyone else?