Originally posted by joewr
Roaky,
But like the Greek philosopher, I will answer it with another question: if a Ford engineer told you it was safe to corner an Explorer at 70 mph even though the company recommendation was 35 mph, would you do it?
Since I'm not a Greek philosopher, but an engineer whos used to answering questions when asked, Ill answer the question.
If a Ford engineer told me it was safe to corner an Explorer at 70 mph and I felt it was safe to corner a Ford Explorer at 70 mph and a whole bunch of Florida cave divers told me that they've been cornering their Explorers at 70 mph for years without any problems, you bet I would.
In fact, even if NO Ford engineer told me it was safe to corner my Explorer at 70 mph and I felt it was safe to corner a Ford Explorer at 70 mph and a whole bunch of Florida cave divers told me that they've been cornering their Explorers at 70 mph for years without any problems, I'd corner it at 70 mph.
Once again we're at that impasse where you think engineers and scientists have some monopoly on good, usable data. Aint so. Just like the data *I* collected over the years let me know that letting go of a weight belt above my foot is a bad idea, even before joew the engineer told me so. Ya know, I just realized that no engineer or scientist has told me that joew is really an engineer, so his statement is now suspect
In addition, by picking something that is unsafe (cornering an Explorer at 70 mph) for your analogy, you've used your conclusion (overfilling is unsafe) to support your argument. As an engineer you should realize that that is a flawed argument.
Despite the flawed analogy, I gave you an answer to your question (readers digest version: yes, with stated conditions), how about you me give an answer to my question?
Roak
Ps. In case I wasn't clear, the 4.5k psi for 10,000 cycles resulted in zero failures. My question is if this is a design parameter for the cylinder, would you fill it to 3.5k even if it was stamped 2400+?