ggunn
PE (Electrical), NABCEP certified
- Location
- Austin, TX, USA
- Occupation
- Consulting Electrical Engineer - Photovoltaic Systems
OK, consider this:Actually, yes, I have done the experiment. If the hose is dead level except for a bit at the far end and totally full of water, I do not have to blow harder, I just have to wait patiently for a longer time for the water to start moving.
If the hose is on uneven ground, with ups and downs and air pockets along the way, then more pressure is needed. And we can discuss the physics behind that offline to avoid boring this Forum.
One illustration of this is that a water level can work regardless of how long the hose is. But the longer the hose, the slower the oscillations that happen whenever you move just one end. It is all a matter of time. If you are impatient, you can blow harder instead.
Lay down a 6' piece of 4" conduit next to a 600' piece of 4" conduit on a level plain and fill them with water. Put frictionless pistons in them to keep the water from running out on its own. Which one are you going to have to push harder on to get the water moving?
F=m*a. Pressure is force per unit area; the areas are the same so that cancels. There's a lot more mass in the long conduit, hence a lot more force is necessary for the same acceleration.
Granted, even a little force gives you *some* acceleration, but if you'll look a few posts back I said, "I think with a ton and a half of water to move ... with a leaf blower you'd have a long wait." I think that was accurate.
I'm still up for trying it if you want , but I don't think we are disagreeing on a fundamental level. I don't think either of us believes that a leaf blower is a practical solution. If nothing else, I believe that the back pressure would burn out the motor in the leaf blower long before the conduit was clear.
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