Does anyone know what it is exactly?
Does anyone know what it is exactly?
google much?
http://www.chem.ucalgary.ca/courses/...ilingpoint.pdf
second hit, gives you an exact answer on page 2 and then show you how to account for varying ambient temperature.
Originally posted by adam c
Line goes up, line goes down, line does squiggly things and fucks Alberta"The stone age didn't end because we ran out of stones"
http://www.csgnetwork.com/h2oboilcal...lf=&yieldvalc=
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_th...Alberta_Canada
I get around 205 degrees F.
96.11*C
I'm voting for who the fuck cares?
-U
check the steam tables ! 96 sounds about right
~369K
also, keep in mind that tap water has impurities, which will change the boiling point. distilled water is what you need if you are going to be exact.
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Last edited by RickDaTuner; 06-26-2011 at 01:17 PM.
It will change when the atmospheric pressure changes, so the exact answer is there is none.Originally posted by nonofyobiz
Does anyone know what it is exactly?
I remember a couple of second year engineering courses where we used 96° as an approximation
Go Flames!
Since nobody else has asked...
What are you doing that you need a precise number?
"Masked Bandit is a gateway drug for frugal spending." - Unknown303
96*C
the elevation and lower air pressure allows water to expand to its gas state with less energy.
I hear that at the top of mount everest water boils are 52*c
2011 Chevy Colorado Z71 - 5.3L LH9 - Daily driver
2003 Mazda B4000 on 35s
Originally posted by kertejud2
~369K
Depends what you are using to heat the water with.
It's none of your business.Originally posted by nonofyobiz
Does anyone know what it is exactly?
Meth labs use water dont they
Originally posted by adam c
Line goes up, line goes down, line does squiggly things and fucks Alberta"The stone age didn't end because we ran out of stones"
ummm, what?Originally posted by Troll-ol
Depends what you are using to heat the water with.
heloc that shit
Yeah that. It will vary depending on heat source, for eg. Natural gas flame vs. campfire flame vs. underpass hobo garbage bin flame.Originally posted by Troll-ol
Depends what you are using to heat the water with.
to a certain extent that is true. It's possible to superheat water with a microwave, but very difficult to accomplish that same result with the Hobo-stove (tm) mentioned above.
Ain't technology wonderful?
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