|
09/28/2008, 04:16 AM | #101 | ||||
Registered Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Pittsburgh
Posts: 20,772
|
Quote:
So when a fan, heater or pump uses energy, that energy is imparted to the room. When it is, most of it is turned directly to heat. Mechanical motion causes friction, vibration is turned to heat. Light is absorbed as heat, etc. What is not turned to heat must be stored. Our rooms do not store energy. Sure the fan blows a piece of paper and dust that land on higher surfaces (energy is now stored as potential). Some of the light does get converted to chemical energy and some does escape. However, those quantities of energy are so small that they don't matter to any signifigance for OUR conversation. We are not counting down to the last electron. For our purposes, 100W consumed in our room creates 100W of heat in that room. Period. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
This topic has been covered by 2-3 HUGE threads and in each case the outcome is the same. The majority of people do not grasp the basic physics needed to talk about this subject and therefore end up on the wrong side of the logic |
||||
09/28/2008, 07:13 AM | #102 | |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: Wyoming
Posts: 44,684
|
Quote:
I'll take that as a request. You can always report a thread you start and ask for it to be closed. Some of you need to read the User Agreement again.
__________________
Debi ~60 Cube~ Why? Because I said so of course. -Sent via Tapatalk Smoke Signals- |
|
Thread Tools | |
|
|