"Gilligan" wrote in message . ..
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| "Paladin" noneofyourbusiness.www wrote in message
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| "Gilligan" wrote in message
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http://encarta.msn.com/media_4615415...for_Water.html
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| The diagram proves my point. Since there is no significant temperature
| change involved with a propeller but there is a significant pressure
| change
| then the water does not vaporize because it boils. Rather it vaporizes
| because
| of the pressure change.
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| I'm just so brilliant. You can't even manage to misdirect me.
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| I can't misdirect you, but I can set you straight.
You've done an inadequate job of it so far...
| When water boils, as in your kettle, those "bubbles" are water vapor
| suspended in the liquid water.
Agreed. But, suspended is a poor word choice. I prefer to call it
water vapor displacing the liquid water.
| Cavitation is caused by the propeller slipping on water vapor suspended in
| the liquid water.
Quaintly envisioned. Highly inadequate. Cavitation is a descriptive term used
to describe the vaporization of the water near the low pressure side of the
propeller blades resulting in over-revving of the engine. The over-revving of
the engine is caused by the prop losing contact with the water.
| Would it then be reasonable to say that cavitation is caused by water
| boiling?
Not in the case of a boat unless it was in a giant pot of boiling water
on the stove.
| OR
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| Cavitation can only happen in your tea kettle?
Cavitation could very well be caused by operating a prop in boiling
water but the prop doesn't cause the water to boil. The fire under
the tea kettle is doing that job.
Now, who's straightening out whom?
Paladin
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