A W Smith
Philosopher
Overweight? Now, try the 3.7 meter jump.
We don't need to jump 3.7 meters. We can just scale up our results. Just like you scaled down using pizza boxes.
Overweight? Now, try the 3.7 meter jump.
Should I report you for wishing me bodily harm? I'm petty sure (no I know) I would break something.Overweight? Now, try the 3.7 meter jump.
It's self-refuting anyways.
Note how he lists weight with mass, and implies it is different than force.
Newsflash: Weight is a force measurement.
Which is one of the reasons I call Poe.
Pls, do the experiment ... and then post comment.
It seems DMG only jumped from one meter and managed to decelerate to zero velocity in order to survive. During deceleration/change/reduction of velocity DMG also managed to check the scale. Quite good. Now, let's do it from 3.7 meters.
But so far so good. Nobody has collapsed any scales or bathroom floors so far! Just carry on!
dude. i majored in geography. even I remember from high school physics that an object's mass (and therefore force upon impact) increases with speed.
throw a ball at you at 6 mph. no big deal. throw the SAME ball at you at 90 mph?
OUCH!!!!
dude. i majored in geography. even I remember from high school physics that an object's mass (and therefore force upon impact) increases with speed.
As JREF posters discussing the WTC1 collapse on the Pizza Box Tower thread don't know the difference between weight/mass (kg) and force (N) and moving bodies, let's do a new experiment in the bathroom in this thread and prove Bazant and NIST wrong, i.e. debunk them.
wikipedia said:In the physical sciences, weight is a measurement of the gravitational force acting on an object.[1] Near the surface of the Earth, the acceleration due to gravity is approximately constant; this means that an object's weight is roughly proportional to its mass.
In commerce and in many other applications, weight means the same as mass as that term is used in physics.[1][2] In modern scientific usage, however, weight and mass are fundamentally different quantities: mass is an intrinsic property of matter, whereas weight is a force that results from the action of gravity on matter: it measures how strongly gravity pulls on that matter.
However, the recognition of this difference is, historically, a relatively recent development and in many everyday situations the word "weight" continues to be used when "mass" is meant. For example, we say that an object "weighs one kilogram", even though the kilogram is a unit of mass.
All you need is a bathroom scale! And a bathroom. And a ladder.
Assume you are in the bathroom and step on the scale and that it announces that your weight it 120 kgs (or what ever that is in US - 20 inches)! OK, you are only 160 cms (what is that - 3 lbs?) tall, so you are a small, fat weight, but who cares.
Most Americans are overweight.
So far so good. Now the experiment. You are going to jump on the scale from 3.7 meters height and see, if your weight changes. Of course your bathroom has a high ceiling. Americans have big houses.
OK, get the ladder into the bathroom and step up to the 3.7 m level. Don't knock your head against the ceiling.
Now jump on the scale!! WOSH, BANG!
What is your weight? Still 120 kgs! The scale records the same weight.
Now a lot of people will say that your weight changed, when you impacted the scale, but it was 120 kgs before and after the experiment, so why would it change in between?
OK, but you normally do not measure your weight by jumping from 3.7 meters on your bathroom scale! So whatever you measure then, was not your weight.
As JREF posters discussing the WTC1 collapse on the Pizza Box Tower thread don't know the difference between weight/mass (kg) and force (N) and moving bodies, let's do a new experiment in the bathroom in this thread and prove Bazant and NIST wrong, i.e. debunk them.
All you need is a bathroom scale! And a bathroom. And a ladder...
(snip various)

Let's stick to the subject.Heiwa, how does a sabot round take out a tank?