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#1
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The picture is bad but it's still interestiing. The poor crab just
disappears. http://www.digitalfog.com/gallery/crab.htm |
#2
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B J Conner wrote:
The picture is bad but it's still interestiing. The poor crab just disappears. http://www.digitalfog.com/gallery/crab.htm crab juice -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#3
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Always wondered how you make a crab cocktail.
-- Frank Reid Reverse email to reply |
#4
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I wonder:
a) what the guy at the other end of the pipe thought that greygreen chunky sludge was that come through the pipe b) what that pipe carried c) how it kept from collapsing when the structural integrity was compromised by the saw. Thats a lot of PSI, as the crab will attest. --riverman |
#5
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message oups.com... I wonder: a) what the guy at the other end of the pipe thought that greygreen chunky sludge was that come through the pipe b) what that pipe carried c) how it kept from collapsing when the structural integrity was compromised by the saw. Thats a lot of PSI, as the crab will attest. --riverman huh? |
#6
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Umm, lots of outside pressure on something like a cylinder compresses
it evenly, like squeezing an egg in your hand without it breaking. But if you compromise ths struture of the the tube, it can implode. Just wondering how the tube keeps from imploding when they cut into it. Did I miss something? Again? --riverman |
#7
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![]() "riverman" wrote in message oups.com... Umm, lots of outside pressure on something like a cylinder compresses it evenly, like squeezing an egg in your hand without it breaking. But if you compromise ths struture of the the tube, it can implode. Just wondering how the tube keeps from imploding when they cut into it. Did I miss something? Again? The list of suitable materials for a pipeline at that kind of depth and pressure is going to be a very short one. It's safe to assume, I think, that it's some sort of steel. Can't tell much for sure about the size of the pipe but assuming the crab is neither a giant nor a pygmy species, and judging by the hint of curvature in the cut, I'd guess we're looking at something in the range of several inches to a couple of feet in diameter. Even at ground level and low pressures pipe that size would have a wall thickness of 1/4 inch or more. I haven't looked it up, but I'm pretty sure that 2700 psi is well within the strength limits of just about any steel at that thickness. What I find curious is the assertion that pressure inside the pipe is 0 psi. Why (and how, for that matter) would someone generate and maintain a vacuum in a pipeline at that depth and pressure? Then too, if you pause the video at just the right point, it looks very much like about half of the crab gets across the cut with no apparent difficulty before the whole thing gets sucked in. And then it disappears in large chunks. If the suction is great enough to make big chunks of crab disappear in a small fraction of a second, how did it manage to get so far? Shouldn't it have gone in feet first? Wolfgang |
#8
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![]() "Wolfgang" wrote in message ... "riverman" wrote in message oups.com... Umm, lots of outside pressure on something like a cylinder compresses it evenly, like squeezing an egg in your hand without it breaking. But if you compromise ths struture of the the tube, it can implode. Just wondering how the tube keeps from imploding when they cut into it. Did I miss something? Again? The list of suitable materials for a pipeline at that kind of depth and pressure is going to be a very short one. It's safe to assume, I think, that it's some sort of steel. Can't tell much for sure about the size of the pipe but assuming the crab is neither a giant nor a pygmy species, and judging by the hint of curvature in the cut, I'd guess we're looking at something in the range of several inches to a couple of feet in diameter. Even at ground level and low pressures pipe that size would have a wall thickness of 1/4 inch or more. I haven't looked it up, but I'm pretty sure that 2700 psi is well within the strength limits of just about any steel at that thickness. What I find curious is the assertion that pressure inside the pipe is 0 psi. Why (and how, for that matter) would someone generate and maintain a vacuum in a pipeline at that depth and pressure? Then too, if you pause the video at just the right point, it looks very much like about half of the crab gets across the cut with no apparent difficulty before the whole thing gets sucked in. And then it disappears in large chunks. If the suction is great enough to make big chunks of crab disappear in a small fraction of a second, how did it manage to get so far? Shouldn't it have gone in feet first? Wolfgang That has to be a natural gas pipeline. The North Sea has some that may be that deep. The deepest one I remember reading about is the one from North Africa to Italy. The crab has to have stumbled onto the cut soon after the operation began. The pipe was probably depressurized for the cut and may have been purged with nitrogen. Once the cut is opened up the inflow would only last till the pipe filled up. Pipeline engineering is at pretty advanced state, crab collapse mechanics is an untouched science. |
#9
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Actually, if you look closely (or compare the end and start images),
the entire crab doesn't even get sucked in. A big piece get stuck right against the saw blade, near where it looks like the saw did a double cut. My guess is that the whirling saw blade did as much to segment the crab (or at least break its shell initially) as the 'pressure'. --riverman |
#10
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Wouldn't there be bubbles of nitrogen escaping as the water flooded the
pipe? --riverman |
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