Investigating Angular Velocity
mbreitba writes "Sam Barros is at it again, Some may know him for his Railgun research, and some may know him for his homemade cannons. But now he's found a use for all those old CD's you don't need anymore. Personally, I couldn't think of a better use for them."
From the site:
A standard compact disk has a diameter of 12cm. If this disk is to spin at 35000RPM, the peripheral velocity at the edges of the disk (.377m circumference x 583.3 turns per second) will near 220m/s, or 722fps, or 792km/h or 492miles per hour. That is one fast CD-Rom!
At those speeds the CD is storing over 150joules of energy.
I wonder if Freezing the CD would make for even more spectacular explosions... after all the speed and energy stored in the CD is really ridiculous.
Freezing usually makes most things more fragile, right?
.: Max Romantschuk
Too expensive, and for what? Is a CD burned in 3 minutes not fast enough for you? Would you be willing to pay 4x as much to burn a CD in only 1.5 minutes?
Is a CD burned in 3 minutes not fast enough for you?
hell no its not fast enough.. if I wanted to make a backup of my cd collection at 3 minutes a disc it would take me a week! I dont know about paying 4x as much for 1.4 minutes but let the market decide that one.. don't decide 3 minutes should be fast enough for everybody. If there was a burner that could burn a cd in 5 seconds I'm sure there are plenty of people willing to pay a premium for it
bite my glorious golden ass.
This picture is great. The guy is sitting on the floor looking at a 35000 RPM CD which is most certainly going to explode, and wearing nothing but a pair of (what looks to be) sunglasses! He looks like a little kid whose found his first book of matches and is mesmerized by fire! I can't view the video (./'d) so I can't comment of his actual procedure, but from the looks of things he could have been in for a world of hurt. At 35000 RPM, that plastic might as well be concrete, or glass.
currently the laser passes through a series of lesnses to focus the beam correctly, and the incident ray has no problem returning to it's point of origin through the same set of lenses
if you design a network of spinning mirrors, there shouldn't be a problem, because the light can still travel back through the set of mirrors back to the sensor which is located next to the laser
What? Me? Worry?