Message from @^Kevin^

Discord ID: 563243947460132883


2019-04-04 06:07:25 UTC  

Are you telling me I can't make myself spin?

2019-04-04 06:07:26 UTC  

KEVIN, the rocket is NOT pushing off of itself

2019-04-04 06:07:44 UTC  

If I was in a vacuum chamber and I switched on an angle grinder I reckon it would still spin

2019-04-04 06:07:44 UTC  

The gases leaving the rocket are applying a force to the rocket to propel it forward

2019-04-04 06:07:49 UTC  

but no linear motion no

2019-04-04 06:08:12 UTC  

rockets don't work in vacuums because the stuff its expelling called propellant needs something to propel off of

2019-04-04 06:08:19 UTC  

if you take a boat and remove it from water

2019-04-04 06:08:20 UTC  

propellors can spin on an airplane when you fly too high but the propellors are doing nothing, no forwards propulsion

2019-04-04 06:08:31 UTC  

No, Kevin it doesn't. The gas is combusting and expanding.

2019-04-04 06:08:31 UTC  

its not going to move , its out of the element it was designed to move in

2019-04-04 06:08:43 UTC  

no amount of newtonian laws is going to make a boat move when its not in water

2019-04-04 06:08:49 UTC  

It is being forced out because of this.

2019-04-04 06:08:56 UTC  

Feminism is gae lel

2019-04-04 06:08:58 UTC  

same with rockets, rockets don't work when they are out of the medium they were created to move in

2019-04-04 06:09:09 UTC  

Well if you put the boat onto some ice and you sanded down the hull and you removed all drag and you spun the propellor really fast i reckon you could make the boat move forwards very very slowly

2019-04-04 06:09:10 UTC  

rocket without air is a boat without water

2019-04-04 06:09:13 UTC  

Kevin, are you reading what I'm typing?

2019-04-04 06:10:00 UTC  

combustian works differently in a vacuum

2019-04-04 06:10:08 UTC  

its less explosive

2019-04-04 06:10:10 UTC  

either way I think a rocket in a partial pressure chamber isn't going to produce any meaningful thrust

2019-04-04 06:10:21 UTC  

more like sputters

2019-04-04 06:10:35 UTC  

The combustion process isn't occurring in a vaccuum it's occurring in fuel tankks

2019-04-04 06:10:47 UTC  

doesn't matter

2019-04-04 06:10:47 UTC  

They are separated off from the vacuum

2019-04-04 06:10:53 UTC  

yes but if you fill the combustion chamber with fuel and oxidizer and you burn it, there's still enough pressure per second for a reaction to occur

2019-04-04 06:11:02 UTC  

however the reaction has no medium to push off

2019-04-04 06:11:09 UTC  

once its already combusted then its lost its explosive force

2019-04-04 06:11:16 UTC  

The fuel and the oxidizer are separated until they need to be mixed

2019-04-04 06:11:41 UTC  

or in the case of solid rocket motors the fuel and oxidizer are pre-mixed

2019-04-04 06:12:14 UTC  

That is why Sheeple is pointing out to you why Mr. Flappy isn’t going the other way. It should be if the Rocket were creating force to push off of.

2019-04-04 06:12:22 UTC  

it doesn't matter how you slice it, the rocket doesn't work in a vacuum

2019-04-04 06:12:31 UTC  

and pushing that it does is the same thing as pushing the globe lie

2019-04-04 06:12:39 UTC  

it doesn't work and you believing it works doesn't make it so

2019-04-04 06:12:42 UTC  

Communism is superior

2019-04-04 06:12:56 UTC  

in a way im kinda glad you guys dont have jobs in engineering

2019-04-04 06:13:02 UTC  

You can't ignore everything I just said and then say it doesn't work. You haven't given a reason for it to other than, "its in a vacuum"

2019-04-04 06:13:05 UTC  

i would hate to see a flat earther bridge

2019-04-04 06:13:16 UTC  

you mounted something on some steel girders I see no evidence the rocket is going up, all I do see is a load of gas filling up the chamber rapidly and causing a piece of material to flap clearly showing the presence of pressure in the chamber, NOT a vacuum, NOT evidence of meaningful thrust

2019-04-04 06:13:18 UTC  

there is a masters of physics who tells you rockets don't work in a vacuum

2019-04-04 06:13:35 UTC  

nothing is ever a true vacuum

2019-04-04 06:13:36 UTC  

maybe you should be arguing with someone who has a physics degree and knows a thing or two about physics