In a message dated 10/12/2002 3:24:35 PM US Mountain Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< > [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
 >
 > <<
 >  Further, the tank appears to be a 77 gallon tank.  >>
 >
 > A simple question from a not very technical mind. If this is a 77 gallon
 tank
 > at 300 atmospheres, what happens if it ruptures?
 >
 Very bad stuff.  If a square cm of the tank blows, for example, the force
 on that square cm is about 310 Newtons. Assuming that sq. cm is carbon with
 a density of 2 g/cc. , and assuming a 1 cm thickness,  we have 310 Newtons
 (kg m/s^2) acting on 2 g, so the acceleration due to the pressure is
 500*310 m/s^2= 155,000 m/sec^2.  After only a millisecond, the velocity
 should be 155 m/sec.
 
 Can we say shrapnel. >>

Damn the answers are good and fast here. So I take it not one engineer on 
this thought project thought of a ruptured air tank in a collision with a 28 
gallon gas tank?
I thought a ruptured gas tank does not explode unless the gas is first mixed 
with air.

I remember what Howard Huges did with an ax to his steam car.

William Taylor
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