Originally Posted by GSpotMassagerS
You keep throwing up that Wikipedia anybody can post stuff there it doesn’t matter if it is true or not. I could sign up and post stuff if I wanted to. But I found a flaw in your calculations
Water boils at 212 %F at sea level witch is 14.7 PSI
OK if you create a vacuum then that means it will go down past 0 PSI before the vacuum is even a vacuum so by my calculation it drops 14.7 PSI before a vacuum is even created so your calculation are 14.7 PSI off.
Go back and look at the posts, GSpot. My citations have not been exclusively from Wikipedia. My original post, for example, was from http://hyperphy sics.phy-astr.g … tic/vappre.html .
However, you’re not refuting the facts by saying "Well, it’s just Wikipedia."
And, by the way, where are your citations backing your conjecture and anecdotes?
I suggest that you revisit the "flaw in [my] calculations". You’re comparing apples and oranges. PSI (pounds per square inch) and inHg (or mmHg) are two different measurement scales which are not interchangeable. Atmospheric pressure at sea level expressed in those units is 760 mmHg, or 29.53 inHg. Perhaps that is why my hand pump stops at 760 mmHg/30 inHg. It’s incapable of creating more than a perfect vacuum.
Source on those atmospheric pressures at sea level: that unreliable Wikipedia: http://en.wikip edia.org/wiki/A … pheric_pressure
Your new analysis is flawed in one other way. You do realize that we are not, in fact, ‘creating a vacuum’ when we pump? We are creating a relative vacuum; lower pressure compared to the atmospheric pressure where we are. So no, we are not, in fact, ‘dropping 14.7 PSI’ before we create a vacuum to pump with.
Originally Posted by bugasman
Hey Gspot you are right about cooking your cook. But i never had issues with pumping, only when I use high pressures. I gave up a hardcore clamping routine. I was doing 3 sets of 15 min using 2 cable clamps. I used a mouse pad as wrap. And so, after about 10 min. I felt like my skin was burning, a intense pain like burning. I continued the exercise because i dint want to gave up. But after time my skin started to darken and show blisters. It really felt like a burning skin in every aspect.
Bugasman:
You may feel like your skin is burning, but that does not mean that it is burning (or boiling). Not even GSpotMassagerS has made the case (yet) that clamping boils your penis. I have yet to see any measurements of what the actual increase in pressure is, generated inside your penis by clamping.