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duz temperature work like dis?

  1. #1
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    if u wana use a ice block to remove heat from sometin,

    say u got 2 frozen blocks of warter the same size and you are putting them onto two identical warm surfaces, one block is frozen to -10F and the other is frozen to -20F , will the -20 block have absorbed bout twice the heat as the -10 block once they reach equilibrium with the warm surfaces ( the warm ting is very warm and generating lots of heat so in the example ur not gonna run outta heat to pull out of it.
  2. #2
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    for a bunch of college tot tards u guys sure r stupid
  3. #3
    mmQ Lisa Turtle
    Are you using liquid helium or hwhat?
  4. #4
    apt Tuskegee Airman
    nigger
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  5. #5
    A College Professor victim of incest [your moreover breastless limestone]
    Okay , 2% difference in energy doesn't sound like much.

    With more context, I am interested in industrial personnel cooling systems which consist of a small backpack or belt-worn bag that has a little battery powered pump and a 'reservoir' that you put ice cubes or a frozen water bottle in - wthe ice cubes or bottle is surrounded by coolant, and it pumps the coolant through tubing in a shirt or pants like this;



    To keep the bags or belts from becoming burdensome to wear they only hold a small amount of frozen substance which is reportedly good for 1-2hrs of good cooling effect.

    Anyway, I was envisioning setting up a crew with the shirts and a small freezer and battery swap station to change-out their bottles and batteries. It seems common residential style deep-freezes are usually capable of around 0 to -10F ( 0 to -23C) operation so I assume this is what the system manufacturer is basing the cooling time off of. I was just trying to think if modifying the freezer or buying a more specialty freezer that will pull lower temps would translate to significantly longer "cooling time" for the guy wearing the system.

    Ideally you could pull more like a solid 2.5 hours of cooling even on the hottest days because workers would be on breaktime by then anyway so it would be a natural time to swap equipment out after break.
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