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RE: THOR Bang energy vs. streamer length measured
Original poster: "jimmy hynes" <chunkyboy86-at-yahoo-dot-com>
It depends on how you define length. If it's the length that it can hit
once per second, then it
does matter.
--- Tesla list <tesla-at-pupman-dot-com> wrote:
> Original poster: "Denicolai, Marco" <Marco.Denicolai-at-tellabs-dot-com>
>
> Hi Steve,
>
> > I thought about it some more- This needs a correction. Marco
> > did his calculations on the basis of probability per bang,
> > i.e. at a given set of conditions, 1 out of every 50 bangs
> > would result in a spark hitting the target.
> >
> > Now, even if that probability did not alter with bps, the
> > sparks would still appear to get longer as the bps increases,
> > just because there are more sparks per second, so the
> > probability of seeing a freakishly large one in a given time
> > interval is that much higher.
> >
> > Steve C.
>
> Sorry but it was the other way round. It was just the probability of a
> hit that changed with the BPS. The spark length did NOT change with the
> BPS.
> The fact that there are more hits doesn't mean that length grows!
> Remember that I count the number of bangs needed to score a hit. Their
> distribution didn't change! Same number of bangs are needed to hit the
> rod.
>
> It was like with playing golf. You usually get to the hole with, say,
> about five strikes. When you fail you loose the ball into the lake
> nearby or into the woods. Now if your skills better you just reach more
> often the hole. But that doesn't mean your strikes are more powerful.
>
> Best Regards
>
>
>
=====
Jimmy