• @[email protected]
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    1 month ago

    It’s a difference of like 7 psi over an area of what looks like maybe 30 square inches, which would be uncomfortable to get caught in, but I don’t think you’re getting Byford Dolphined

    • @yetiftw
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      151 month ago

      210 lbs will certainly keep you stuck there though

      • @DogWater
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        51 month ago

        For fun you can search up Delta P to get to industrial horrors beyond comprehension

      • @FinishingDutch
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        31 month ago

        Ayyyy, a wild Well There’s Your Problem reference. By far my favourite podcast.

    • @BleatingZombie
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      31 month ago

      If you were on your back and had your legs above the hole, is 7 psi strong enough that you wouldn’t be able to fight it?

      I guess another question would be “how strong would it be compared to gravity?” (if anybody has any idea)

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        It very much depends on the size of the hole. 7 psi over 1 square inch is 7 lbs, but the same pressure over 100 square inches is 700 lbs.

        For a naive estimate, the hole looks around 6 inches wide, which gives it an area of around 30 square inches, so there’s like 200 lbs of water pressure over the area of the hole. An even more naive assumption is that if you were “standing” over the hole in the wall, you would feel 200 lbs of pressure forcing you “down,” which I think most people could easily handle. I’m doing more than that right now!

        Unfortunately I don’t know how to even start to calculate the force of the water on you as it rushes past you, but my gut instinct is that it wouldn’t be more than the total pressure in the hole