I guess it would be a way to do it that explains the contrail gap.
Thank you Ross. I have memory problems after my stroke and I thought I was going mad as I could not get the numbers to add up.The correct expression (to 2 dp) is:
Al2(CH3)6 + 12O2 = Al2O3 + 6CO2 + 9H2O
[1 gram] + [1.27 grams] = [0.71 grams] + [1.83 grams] + [1.12 grams]
TMA + Oxygen = Aluminum Oxide + Carbon Dioxide + Water
If you are giving it 20 grams of oxygen, you will get 18.73 grams of surplus oxygen along with the other combustion products.
The point you are making is unclear (to me, at least).
Mind of an engineer? What drunk with porn on the walls? ;-) Sorry I could not resist.Ah! Mass budget argument again!
Yes, a very powerful one it is, too.
You can see the mind of an engineer at work there.
(and given it is in fuel how much can be added before the plane stops?)
Burning TMA yields an Aluminium oxide weight of 71% of the original weight of the TMA?
100 grams = 353 AUD = ~ 400 USD=~4000 USD per kg TMA
Ross, I ran the figures with an excess of oxygen which bumped up the yield of alumina just a bit.Ah! Mass budget argument again!
Yes, a very powerful one it is, too.
You can see the mind of an engineer at work there.
Yes give us a quote, Max. It should be eminently debunkable. You owe us at least that after some rather public accusations.
Like this guy?
I commented on a Facebook post about getting the stuff tested and he tried to friend me. er No thanks. It may well have been a pollen release or something but a lack of dead animals suggest a lack of toxicity. Also who owns a military respirator and why? Well I know one but less said the better
Well! I saw a flash of red so it has to be super man. Apart from that I would have thought, being totally ignortant of such things, that that would be classified as a near miss. Apart from that very little other than wings level and a near easterly heading.I'm curious to know how much info people can get from this short video.
Well I gathered that your avionics are ancient! Jk... But they are old
I'm curious to know how much info people can get from this short video.
29.92 is standard atmosphere which we set at altitudes at or above 18,000 feet. It's for the aircraft altimeter.
Maybe neither?Trick question...who is flying the airplane? The captain or the first officer?
Here's mine.How much info can you get from this?I'm curious to know how much info people can get from this short video.
You're sinking fast?Here's mine.How much info can you get from this?
A train? Which company? My uncle works for Union Pacific out of Cheyenne as an engineer. I think he's been there almost 40 years.Here's mine.How much info can you get from this?