Hi Brian.
If her atmosphere is compressed when she floods
her open to the hull interior ballast tanks and the atmosphere is no longer
exactly 1 atm, then she cannot be accurately called 1 atm which is 14.7
lbs of pressure per square inch.
Some people have said that she is "close" to one
atmosphere. But that is not 1 atm. It does not make sense to call something a
mathematically specific term when it is not. You either are pregnant or you
are not.
You cannot be close to pregnant, you cannot be a
little bit pregnant, you either are or you are not pregnant. Just like it is
either 14.7 lbs of pressure at sea level (1 atm) or it is not. It would be
incorrect to call 15.7 lbs of pressure
1 atm when it is not. That is what you and others
are saying with the Hunley though and it is not correct not only for the
Hunley but for any submarine that does not have an interior atmosphere of
exactly 14.7 lbs of pressure per square inch.
A column of air one inch by one inch wide
extending up into the atmosphere 60 miles presses toward the earth with a
force or weight of 14.7 lbs also known as 1 atmosphere.
Our scientists and mathmaticians calculated 1 atm
to be 14.7 lbs. Not 15.7 lbs, not 16.7 lbs nor even less at 13.7 lbs. Either a
submarine's interior atmospheric pressure is 1 atm or 14.7 lbs per square inch
or it is not.
If the Hunley started out at the surface with
hatches open with an interior atmosphere of 14.7 lbs and then trapped all
her air when she submerged, then filled her open to the hull interior ballast
tanks with water which compressed the
rest of the hull's interior atmosphere to a
higher pressure than 14.7 lbs, then the Hunley's atmosphere was no longer
14.7 lbs and therefore she was no longer a 1 atm sub. As I said in an earlier
e mail, what does "close to 1 atm" mean?
Is that like "a little bit pregnant" or shall we
discuss what the subjective term "reasonable" means? 14.7 lbs of
pressure is NOT subjective. It is a specific mathematical term. 14.7, not
14.8, not 14.6, but 14.7 period.
If the atmosphere of ANY submarine is not 14.7
then they cannot accurately be called a 1 atmosphere submarine and we
need a new term to describe what type of submarine she is. You can call a pig
a giraffe if you want to, but that does not
make it so. I seriously believe we need a new
term in the submarine world to address this discrepancy and I already
suggested it in an earlier posting regarding using 1 atm as a baseline and
testing pressure variables during sea trials and then
catagorizing the sub from a baseline of 1 atm to
whatever her largest pressure variable was. That is accuracy. "Close to" is
not. Show me a sub that has an interior atmosphere that measures 14.7
lbs of pressure per square inch and I will agree that is a
1 atm sub. If she has an atmosphere of 14.9 lbs,
then she is not 1 atm since 1 atm is 14.7 lbs ONLY. There may be times she is
1 atm and times she is not, so it would not be correct to just call her by the
term of 1 atm.
It is possible I may be incorrect about the
Hunley being ambient but there is no way she could be 1 atm either with her
tanks compressing her interior hull atmosphere.
I stand by my statement that we need a new
terminology that is mathmatically specific in describing what type a sub is.
If all the submarines that we normally think of as being 1 atm are actually
not always 1 atm, then they cannot with accuracy
be called 1 atm subs since they are not always 1
atm. Why name something the specific term of 1 atm that means a
mathematical figure of 14.7 when that thing is not always 14.7?
Kindest Regards,
Bill Akins.
Sent: Friday, June 10, 2005 7:57
PM
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] When is
ambient, ambient and 1 atmosphere, 1 atmosphere?
The Hunley is a 1 ATM
submarine.
Brian Cox