lol
Moderator: victimizati0n
what you want mathematical equations?
basically you just fill the tube with w/e liquid youre dealing with, and make the outlet hole lower than the inlet hole. since the outlet hole is lower, there is more liquid being pulled by gravity in the 'out' direction. that 'amount' of gravity overpowers the other part of the tube leading to the inlet hole, letting the liquid continuously get pulled 'out'
"First, let's define a siphon. A siphon is any pipe, hose or tube that is used to move a liquid from a higher location to a lower location. To use a siphon, you fill the pipe or hose with the liquid and stick one end of the pipe in the liquid at the higher location. Then you let the liquid start draining at the lower location. As the liquid drains out of the pipe at the lower location, a vacuum develops that sucks the water from the higher location. Gravity and suction do all the work, so no pump is required! You can use siphons to drain ponds, empty barrels, remove gasoline from a gas tank, etc."
~ HowStuffWorks
basically you just fill the tube with w/e liquid youre dealing with, and make the outlet hole lower than the inlet hole. since the outlet hole is lower, there is more liquid being pulled by gravity in the 'out' direction. that 'amount' of gravity overpowers the other part of the tube leading to the inlet hole, letting the liquid continuously get pulled 'out'
"First, let's define a siphon. A siphon is any pipe, hose or tube that is used to move a liquid from a higher location to a lower location. To use a siphon, you fill the pipe or hose with the liquid and stick one end of the pipe in the liquid at the higher location. Then you let the liquid start draining at the lower location. As the liquid drains out of the pipe at the lower location, a vacuum develops that sucks the water from the higher location. Gravity and suction do all the work, so no pump is required! You can use siphons to drain ponds, empty barrels, remove gasoline from a gas tank, etc."
~ HowStuffWorks
For computers, buying cheaply and often will only leave you constantly in a world of shit.
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no, all the water doesnt get drained, it will stop once they are equalI7Iz490N wrote:It's just wierd, like that seems so .. unbeliavable... like the hole is 5m high, the water is 5.5m high (higher than the hole) and so it starts getting drained out of the pipe and even when its less than the level of the hole it still keeps getting drained... it just seems shocking
like, if it was 4.9m and the hole was 5m nothing would happen but when u go over ALL the water gets drained
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