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Started by owlhoot, February 18, 2018, 09:29:13 PM
Quote from: drenalinld on February 19, 2018, 12:22:08 PMIf you throw a baseball 90 mph and throw a basketball also 90 mph which one will travel farthest? Which one would you rather be hit with at 40 yards? This is the same concept.
Quote from: Number17 on February 19, 2018, 11:16:50 PMQuote from: drenalinld on February 19, 2018, 12:22:08 PMIf you throw a baseball 90 mph and throw a basketball also 90 mph which one will travel farthest? Which one would you rather be hit with at 40 yards? This is the same concept.Pretty lousy analogy actually.Considering they are both falling to Earth at 9.8 m/s/s, they will travel exactly the same distance before they hit the ground.Why not make it even more ridiculous and say which one would you rather get hit with, a shot put or a styrofoam ball?
Quote from: drenalinld on February 20, 2018, 09:14:10 AMBaseball vs basketball is an exaggeration but not because of size difference. As stated a baseball weighs 5 oz and a basketball weighs 22 oz. The baseball has app. 13 cu in volume and the basketball app. 450 cu in. Comparing densities, the baseball would be about 0.38 oz/cu in and the basketball 0.049 oz/cu in. Baseball has greater density by almost a factor of 10. The TSS is just over 1.5x more dense than lead so it is and exaggeration but my point that the more dense sphere will retain velocity better is valid and significant. The similar shaped objects will perform similarly if dropped from the sky as long as density is above a threshold excluding surface friction differences. Not true of projectiles launched opposing gravity. Confident you understand it plenty well but thought my comparison was exaggerated.
Quote from: drenalinld on February 21, 2018, 08:11:05 AMFired at the same velocity there is never a time a lead 5 penetrates as deep as a TSS 9 in any medium. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk