MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,153
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Given speed of the inundating water [rather than total river flow] there are those that could figure it out almost off the top of their head. Not me. Off the top of my head tho, and from deep enuf in to know it for a fact, the pressures seen are much lower - in a range below 10psi. -- Its forces [pressure times area] that are huge. A force of a thousand or more pounds can easily be applied to a person.
larry
Everyone has to recognize a few danger spots in a river. Places between rocks, logs, dams, bridge pilings, etc... where currents suddenly increase.
In our man made whitewater course, we had a spot that was about 20' across and the current was flowing at 4MPH, or about 5.4 feet per second. The water was 4' deep. The pressure exerted against your body is about 300 pounds per square foot. You cannot stand up in that current. We put in a stop log across 1/2 of the channel, narrowing the channel to 10' wide. Now the same amount of water has to move through 1/2 the space. The current instantly increases to 8 mph. You would think the force of the water would double at that point. But it doesn't. It goes up by a factor of 4. So the force against your body is now over 1200 pounds per square foot. If you are pinned against a rock or log with that much water pushing against your body, well, its deep doo-doo time.