T
TokaMundo
Guest
On Wed, 03 Aug 2005 06:13:41 -0500, John Fields
<jfields@austininstruments.com> Gave us:
uniformly heated.
exception is the connection points to the current source.
then corrected to say that the resistance to said flow is the
condition which causes the generated. I didn't say a damned thing
about the current generating the resistance. That is a function of
the media the current is passing through.
Your remark is retarded.
pointless forest.
nothing more than bullshit opinion.
<jfields@austininstruments.com> Gave us:
Yes, and it has a surface area function, retard boy.On Wed, 03 Aug 2005 00:59:51 GMT, TokaMundo
TokaMundo@weedizgood.org> wrote:
Since a thin round copper wire has a very low emissivity it wont
give up its heat all that fast.
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Ever hear of convection, dumbass?
Your IQ is ten.Got some numbers?
Just as I stated, when the wire turns cherry red from current, it isOr is this going to be another one of your
unsubstantiated claims?
uniformly heated.
The entire wire has the same temp and the same heat. The onlyThis will mean that your thermal
gradient won't be as prevalent as you suggest. The proof is when one
takes a copper wire and places it across a battery's terminals.
Notice how the entire wire turns a nice cherry red quite evenly, all
the way up to where it is attached to any form of sinking element.
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I see. Just by _looking_ at the glowing wire you can tell what the
temperature differential is between the center of the wire and its
surface? Amazing!!!
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The current throughout the wire will be even,
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No, it won't. it'll be lower in the parts of the wire which are
hotter.
exception is the connection points to the current source.
I never said it did. I said the current generates the heat, andand it is that current
which generates the heat, or more precisely, the resistance to said
current flow.
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The current changes the temperature of the wire, but it doesn't
generate the resistance of the wire.
then corrected to say that the resistance to said flow is the
condition which causes the generated. I didn't say a damned thing
about the current generating the resistance. That is a function of
the media the current is passing through.
Your remark is retarded.
No shit. That's what "resistance to said flow" refers to, dipshit.The wire's resistance
No shit.and its
temperature coefficient of resistance are due to the resistivity and
tempco of the material the wire is made of.
What you have to say about it is certainly immaterial.If the wire were giving up its heat real fast, like that of a finned
heat sink with air passing over it, I might agree.
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Whether you agree or not is immaterial.
The phenomenon of the entire wire being at the same temperature.The phenomenon occurs with
or without your permission.
You have no point. You and your stupidity has been exiled to theIn the case of
bare copper, however, the temperature throughout the wire is going to
be very even. Your gradient will be nearly undetectable.
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Point is, dimwit, it'll still be there.
pointless forest.
Got something that proves otherwise? Otherwise your rebuttal isFor a very large diameter copper bus, it MIGHT have a slight
gradient between the center and the outer surface, but not much. For
wire, it is as even as even gets.
Got some numbers, or is that just some more of your bullshit
opinion?
nothing more than bullshit opinion.