For something resembling context: it’s a “puffing gun” spotted at the Museum of Food+Drink @mofad. Apparently it is used to “explosively expand starches”. Yum.pic.twitter.com/xF3Y8oaIVL
U tweetove putem weba ili aplikacija drugih proizvođača možete dodati podatke o lokaciji, kao što su grad ili točna lokacija. Povijest lokacija tweetova uvijek možete izbrisati. Saznajte više
For something resembling context: it’s a “puffing gun” spotted at the Museum of Food+Drink @mofad. Apparently it is used to “explosively expand starches”. Yum.pic.twitter.com/xF3Y8oaIVL
Ok, the answer is “Pounds / Square Inch, Gauge”. That means pressure as far as the gauge is concerned; just a simple difference from atmospheric pressure. (I think in metric we call that gag pressure.)https://twitter.com/smartereveryday/status/1220525540437843969 …
Pounds per square inch... gauge pressure. Or gage pressure for you Brits.
Thanks! I was so sure the SI was Square Inch. But then I was like… G for Gravity?
PSI Gauge, or gauge pressure. A measurement of the difference in pressure measured from atmospheric pressure I think
I think about it like Celsius vs Kelvin. Where Celsius is Kelvin - 273.15, gauge pressure is just PSI - 14.7.
Serious answer here from an American engineer who may or may not get the joke that may or may not be here: it's pounds per square inch gauge. It's measured pressure relative to atmospheric pressure, instead of zero. PSIA is relative to zero.
Pounds per Square I Guess?
PSI Gauge?
Parker Square Is Great
Twitter je možda preopterećen ili ima kratkotrajnih poteškoća u radu. Pokušajte ponovno ili potražite dodatne informacije u odjeljku Status Twittera.