Pressure vs. Vacuums

Cannons powered by pneumatic pressure (compressed gas) using a valve or other release.
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irisher
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Atm means atmosphere. It is equivalent to 14.7 .
Tobin
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irisher wrote:Atm means atmosphere. It is equivalent to 14.7 .
Yepp, but i thought atm was only a old swedish abbreviation that were replaced by bar. Ive got atm printed on the old tubes at home and bar on the newer ones.
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saefroch
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Tobin wrote:
irisher wrote:Atm means atmosphere. It is equivalent to 14.7 .
Yepp, but i thought atm was only a old swedish abbreviation that were replaced by bar. Ive got atm printed on the old tubes at home and bar on the newer ones.
That's very odd. The used to measure most pressures in atmospheres?
Tobin
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saefroch wrote:
Tobin wrote:
irisher wrote:Atm means atmosphere. It is equivalent to 14.7 .
Yepp, but i thought atm was only a old swedish abbreviation that were replaced by bar. Ive got atm printed on the old tubes at home and bar on the newer ones.
That's very odd. The used to measure most pressures in atmospheres?
I dont know, have only seen "atm" at my old propane tubes and other tubes. Therefore i thought it was some old swedish name for bar. Now i know better :)
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Technician1002
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Atm is relative and is poorly defined as barometric pressure varies with location, temperature, altitude, and weather.

Bar on the other hand is an absolute measurement and defined.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_%28unit%29

Pascal and Torr is also defined.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure

Here is info on how it is measured. Some are absolute measurements referenced to a vacuum and others are relative referenced to local atmospheric pressure.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure_measurement

As far as the broken youtube link in the video, a simple youtube search brings up several great examples. Try this one. Remember that launch is with atmospheric pressure.
[youtube]http://www.youtube/watch=qHbcsLp8dDI[/youtube]

Ping pong ball through a soda can.
[youtube]http://www.youtube/watch=zYqeRMbH798[/youtube]
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saefroch
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Erm... an atmosphere is a standardized unit. It just doesn't really have to indicate what the local atmospheric pressure is.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_(unit)
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