Search results for query: Boyle's law

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  1. Eaglebeak

    SCUBA Tank as input for Shoebox - Theory Busted...

    This thread has gotten a little off track. Back to your original enquiry. You have misunderstood the point that I was trying to make. The input air for your shoebox is going to be supplied from a doner scuba bottle and nothing else, right?. If that's the case, the same amount of air is going to...
  2. A

    SCUBA Tank as input for Shoebox - Theory Busted...

    OK, time for some high-school physics ...... Boyle's Law says that pressure (P) x volume (V) = constant at a fixed temperature If you mix two volume of gas, one at P1, V1 and the other at P2, V2 and put it into a container of volume V3 and get a pressure of P3, then P1 x V1 + P2 x V2 = P3 x...
  3. ChuckInOhio

    SCUBA Tank as input for Shoebox - Theory Busted...

    Thanks to the members of the forum who have, in a round about way, reminded me that when I’m diving I don’t have a cylinder with 80cf of volume (at ambient pressure of course) strapped to my back, therefore Boyle’s Law will not grant me the mythical amount of air required to run the Shoebox for...
  4. B

    Thermodynamics of filling a PCP, ever notice this?

    The short story here is compression heats and expansion cools. So the gun tank gets warm and the scuba source tank cools adiabaticly. Once the rifle tank cools down to ambient, pressure drops a bit due to Boyles law.
  5. B

    Thermodynamics of filling a PCP, ever notice this?

    ...have smaller steel or aluminum tube tanks. The aluminum or steel acts as a heat sink during the filling process. The light weight CF tanks and the large volume of air means the heat can’t absorb fast enough, and then cools after filling resulting in a pressure drop." _1 Birdo Boyle's law Ron
  6. R

    Filling a Air Venturi tank at a scuba shop. Need help.

    ...from a large storage tank and not using a compressor. When your newly filled tank cools down to room temp, the pressure drops (google Boyle's law for the physics). If possible, its best to leave a tank at the shop overnight, and have them top off the next day. You will still get a pressure...
  7. ztirffritz

    Please help me do the math...

    ...math was simply because the number of fills was eluding the poster in the first place. edit: OK, I see now. In a reply later the original poster asked for the math behind the calculators...got it. Sorry about that. I can't give you an answer, but I'm sure Boyle's Law factors into it...
  8. BigTinBoat

    Please help me do the math...

    
Wondering, did you even read thru the replies? We have the answer....... http://airgunnation.dev/topic/please-help-me-do-the-math/#post-71450 but let's see what the physicist has to say......
  9. ztirffritz

    How Temperature Effects Air Pressure

    ...A gas is a gas. Heated, they expand. Cooled, they contract. Alternately, compress them they get hot, or evacuate them and they cool. Boyle's Law is pretty simple. Steam just provides a dramatic example because it contracts so very much when it is cooled that it actually creates a vacuum...