I was sitting down, putting my shoes on when I thought of a good way to measure a water gun's power.
More powerful water guns have higher outputs compared against less powerful water guns, at the same nozzle diameter. Therefore some sort of output to area ratio would approximate power. Flow per unit area comes out to units of m/s, which is velocity.
Therefore, for the same nozzle diameter, the gun with the higher velocity is more powerful. Seems simple if you think about it, but no one has compared water guns like that yet.
I'm posting this mainly so I don't forget it.
Velocity indicates power
- SSCBen
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Velocity indicates power
Last edited by SSCBen on Mon Dec 03, 2007 9:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Silence
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Re: Velocity indicates power
So you're saying to measure the velocity of each water gun using the same nozzle? Measuring range might work just as well.
Still, I'm a bit confused...I presume you'll explain once you get back.
Still, I'm a bit confused...I presume you'll explain once you get back.
- SSCBen
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- Joined: Sat Mar 22, 2003 1:00 pm
Re: Velocity indicates power
You can approximate velocity with an equation I posted before: http://forums.sscentral.org/31598-post17.html
Actually, when it comes down to it, this statistic might be a little useless because for the same diameter, whatever gun has more output is more powerful. So, this perhaps isn't as useful as I thought.
Actually, when it comes down to it, this statistic might be a little useless because for the same diameter, whatever gun has more output is more powerful. So, this perhaps isn't as useful as I thought.