1Mind1Spirit
Literal lunatic
Really?That's right.
All that just to say you agree with me?Gravity is the observation that masses are attracted to each other according to an inverse square law.
Really?That's right.
All that just to say you agree with me?Gravity is the observation that masses are attracted to each other according to an inverse square law.
How am I to score a field goal if you change the goal post?And you think gravity is not a force.
Hydroelectric power?If [gravity] was a force we could harness it.
Also tidalHydroelectric power?
Birds of a feather (masses) flock together.Gravity is the observation that masses are attracted to each other according to an inverse square law.
No.Hydroelectric power?
No.Also tidal
You brought up gravity.So.... This thread was about something...
It might help to first get a grasp on what gravity does to planets.
The stuff that happened to the crust was only the trigger for the really massive action.
Was it bacon? I think it was bacon. I remember thinking about bacon. Could we make it about bacon? Let's make it about bacon.So.... This thread was about something...
What proposition exactly do you think your link proves or supports? That gravity isn't involved in hydroelectric power? I didn't see that in the link.No.
If gravity was the cause of the force water has to turn the turbines, it wouldn't matter how low the water got.
But this is not the case...
https://www.hcn.org/articles/hydrop...dams?msclkid=2648ff42c02b11eca374a0c21ffdfa03
Why did you make this bold? The lower the reservoir's level the lower the pressure at the bottom of it.Yet dry times still do impact hydropower production because the lower the reservoir, the less force the water has to turn the turbines.
That sounds like good news. What is your point? How is this evidence against gravity, or against gravity being a force?Lake Mead’s “dead pool” — the level at which it could no longer turn the turbines — was once 1,050 feet, about 25 feet below what it is now (and a level that is not in the cards at least for a few more years). But new wide-head turbines have been installed over the last decade, which lowers dead pool to about 950 feet, thus extending Hoover’s hydropower life for a while.
I applaud your persistenceWhat proposition exactly do you think your link proves or supports? That gravity isn't involved in hydroelectric power? I didn't see that in the link.
Why did you make this bold? The lower the reservoir's level the lower the pressure at the bottom of it.
That sounds like good news. What is your point? How is this evidence against gravity, or against gravity being a force?
Before the flood... the earth's crust was almost entirely bacon.Was it bacon? I think it was bacon. I remember thinking about bacon. Could we make it about bacon? Let's make it about bacon.
What proposition exactly do you think your link proves or supports? That gravity isn't involved in hydroelectric power? I didn't see that in the link.
Why did you make this bold? The lower the reservoir's level the lower the pressure at the bottom of it.
That sounds like good news. What is your point? How is this evidence against gravity, or against gravity being a force?
If gravity was the cause of the force water has to turn the turbines, it wouldn't matter how low the water got.
Try to stay on point.With flat Earthers, the question that exposes them is the simplest one: Why?
Why is the Earth flat?