rockets push off air | WHY SPINNING OBJECTS EXPLODE (ignore false comparison linear radius & exponential centrifugal force) @rocketspushoffair | Uploaded January 2019 | Updated October 2024, 6 hours ago.
flatearthclassroom.blogspot.com/2019/03/centrifugal-force.html This proof of flat earth remains unchallenged! Disregard the part about linear vs exponential see flat earth classroom. Only surface speed matters and nothing can withstand spinning 1000 mph. The biggest thing that comes close is the titanium fan of the Trent 900 jet engine. See details at Flat Earth Classroom:
F = π(disruptive force) = π2s = π2(coefficient)v²
Intro track found here youtu.be/S9mQQpBGCz4 Stupid globe-hugger comment:
chrnc avngr
1 hour ago
Wow. Now lets it's amazing. Watching something go hundreds and thousands rpm shatter. We need to watch something go as fast as the earth spins. Let's get it going at the blistering 0.0007 rpm. Oh that's not very fast
With comments like the above, globe-huggers are now doing all the work debunking the globe with stupidity. They have no idea that speed requires units of distance, as in miles per hour, which is over 1000 mph at the equator.
flatearthclassroom.blogspot.com/2019/03/centrifugal-force.html This proof of flat earth remains unchallenged! Disregard the part about linear vs exponential see flat earth classroom. Only surface speed matters and nothing can withstand spinning 1000 mph. The biggest thing that comes close is the titanium fan of the Trent 900 jet engine. See details at Flat Earth Classroom:
F = π(disruptive force) = π2s = π2(coefficient)v²
Intro track found here youtu.be/S9mQQpBGCz4 Stupid globe-hugger comment:
chrnc avngr
1 hour ago
Wow. Now lets it's amazing. Watching something go hundreds and thousands rpm shatter. We need to watch something go as fast as the earth spins. Let's get it going at the blistering 0.0007 rpm. Oh that's not very fast
With comments like the above, globe-huggers are now doing all the work debunking the globe with stupidity. They have no idea that speed requires units of distance, as in miles per hour, which is over 1000 mph at the equator.