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JimmyJockstrap
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how deep would it have to be proportionally to how far you fell?
arildno said:Also, it'll hurt you to collide with the water from that height..
That is a far more relevant concern than the risk to hit some sharp rock lurking at the bottom or be bitten by a grumpy flounder..
rewebster said:(I know)-
-Halls and rbj gave pretty good ones with the information given
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What was that contest where all those people dressed up and jumped off of that dock? ---some commercial for??
JimmyJockstrap said:mean hypothetically there is this bridge. Say someone tries to murder or maim me when I am on the middle of the bridge, nowhere to run. What is the safer option. cop a beating or jump 13.3m?
It is 13.3m above the water. I know someone who jumped and survived off it.
As I previously mentioned, the divers just curve their bodies so that they turn underwater to avoid hitting the bottom. The idea is to reduce g forces, not increase them.Loren Booda said:Acapulco cliff divers jump from 59 feet into (if they are lucky) 9 foot swells, maxing out at 80 mph. Immediately after entering the water one must spread out, maximizing one's bodily surface area.
Loren Booda said:Acapulco cliff divers jump from 59 feet into (if they are lucky) 9 foot swells, maxing out at 80 mph.
My guess is that the impact is proportional to the speed of entry, and that speed squared is proportional to the height jumped.
tony873004 said:I believe the belly-flop results because of the surface tension of the water,
I've heard that when people jump from the Golden Gate Bridge, it's as if they hit concrete.
I've also heard that the few survivors all land feet first, at an angle almost vertical,
which I guess would make them go rather deep. That would not be a fun swim to the surface :(
rbj said:i don't see what the surface tension of the water has to do with the orientation of the diver a millisecond before touching the water. the belly-flop happens because, for whatever reason, the diver or jumper was unable to get into a sufficiently vertical orientation to begin with or to maintain the vertical orientation on the way down...
It's a visual thing (see reference below), so divers can spot distance to the water to adjust their entry. Air bubble usage is rare. Sprinker systems are almost always used. However on a dive pushing the envelope, like a 3 1/3 front pike dive, I'm not sure how much visual feedback there is since the diver has only small windows while rotating to see the pool and judge distance, which is why you see more mishaps on the high flip count type dives. As mentioned in my updated post, the high divers from 60 feet or more aren't going for maximum difficulty, just a save entry, especially when the height (and survival) is the sole judging criteria.tony873004 said:I heard once that in some diving competitions, that air bubbles are released on the bottom of the water to break up the surface tension as they rise to the top. Perhaps someone here who dives can confirm or deny this.
Jeff Reid said:Aerodynamics at the speed that high divers achieve doesn't offer enough resistance to allow a diver to remain vertical control. Almost all high divers going in feet first use one or two controlled front flips with a 1/2 twist at the end, and vary the amount of tuck at the end to end up vertical.
Jeff Reid said:It's a visual thing...
I don't thing surface tension is a big factor. As another factor, it would take a tremendous amount of bubbles to reduce the effective density, as mentioned in another discussion regarding if a boat's water line would be affected by going over a bubbly section of water. I wonder if diving inside the water of a water fall would help (like the cases of barrels over Niagra Falls).tony873004 said:Maybe I'm wrong then about the surface tension being broken by bubbles or choppy water or whatever.
Another way to reduce surface tension is through physical means. If you have ever done a belly flop off the diving board you should be quite familiar with how water's surface tension effected you. Platform divers feel the same sting even when they land properly. To help reduce surface tension, a hose with a nozzle is positioned to spray water into the pool at the spot where the diver enters the water.
Jeff Reid said:... as mentioned in another discussion regarding if a boat's water line would be affected by going over a bubbly section of water. I wonder if diving inside the water of a water fall would help (like the cases of barrels over Niagra Falls).