OT: This Swift thing
Roy Smith
roy at panix.com
Fri Jun 13 08:55:48 EDT 2014
In article <5399019e$0$29988$c3e8da3$5496439d at news.astraweb.com>,
Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python at pearwood.info> wrote:
> On Wed, 11 Jun 2014 08:48:36 -0400, Roy Smith wrote:
>
> > In article <53984cd2$0$29988$c3e8da3$5496439d at news.astraweb.com>,
> > Steven D'Aprano <steve+comp.lang.python at pearwood.info> wrote:
> >
> >> Yes, technically water-cooled engines are cooled by air too. The engine
> >> heats a coolant (despite the name, usually not water these days) which
> >> then heats the air.
> >
> > Not water??? I'm not aware of any water-cooled engines which use
> > anything other than water. Well, OK, it's really a solution of ethylene
> > or propylene glycol in water, but the water is what does most of the
> > heat transfer. The glycol is just there to provide freezing point
> > depression and boiling point elevation.
>
> Would you consider it fair to say that, say, vinegar is "not water"?
> Depending on the type of vinegar, it is typically around 5-10% acetic
> acid, and the rest water. Spirit vinegar can be as much as 20% acetic
> acid, which still leaves 80% water.
In a car, the water is the important part (even if it's only a 50%
component). The primary job of the circulating coolant is to absorb
heat in one place and transport it to another place. That requires a
liquid with a high heat capacity, which is the water. The other stuff
is just there to help the water do its job (i.e. not freeze in the
winter, or boil over in the summer, and some anti-corrosive action
thrown into the mix).
When you said, "usually not water these days", that's a misleading
statement. Certainly, it's "not pure water", or even "just water". But
"not water" is a bit of a stretch.
With vinegar, the acetic acid is the important component. The water is
just there to dilute it to a useful working concentration and act as a
carrier. People are 90% water too, but I wouldn't call a person
"water". I would, however, as a first-order description, call the stuff
circulating through the cooling system in my car, "water".
> Back in the day, car radiators were *literally* water-cooled in the sense
> that the radiator was filled with 100% water. You filled it from the tap
> with drinking water. In an emergency, say broken down in the desert, you
> could drink the stuff from the radiator to survive. If you tried that
> with many modern cars, you would die a horrible death.
But, I could do that right now, with my car (well, not the drinking
part) . In an emergency, I could fill my cooling system with pure
water, and it would work well enough to get me someplace not too far
away where I could get repairs done.
More information about the Python-list
mailing list