Members Avalon1849 Posted March 24, 2019 Members Posted March 24, 2019 One horse=sized duck or 100 duck-sized horses? I just became aware of this expression. Quote
Members MsGuy Posted March 24, 2019 Members Posted March 24, 2019 Well, i googled "one horse sized duck" just on the off chance you weren't abusing your pain meds and WTF! this is a real subject for discussion in the odder crevices of the Net. Who would have guessed? AdamSmith is probably better qualified to opine on this but I think that a horse sized duck runs into something I remember as "the cubed/square problem". As you scale up, the weight (volume/mass) of the duck goes up by a cubed factor while the strength of its bones only increases with the cross-section of the bones, i.e a squared factor.. Long story short, eventually the duck can't stand up w/o breaking its legs with its own weight. AdamSmith and MsAnn 1 1 Quote
AdamSmith Posted March 24, 2019 Posted March 24, 2019 17 hours ago, MsGuy said: Well, i googled "one horse sized duck" just on the off chance you weren't abusing your pain meds and WTF! this is a real subject for discussion in the odder crevices of the Net. Who would have guessed? AdamSmith is probably better qualified to opine on this but I think that a horse sized duck runs into something I remember as "the cubed/square problem". As you scale up, the weight (volume/mass) of the duck goes up by a cubed factor while the strength of its bones only increases with the cross-section of the bones, i.e a squared factor.. Long story short, eventually the duck can't stand up w/o breaking its legs with its own weight. Exactle. Respective body-part proportions have to change radically with changes in size/scale/weight. Thus an ‘enlarging man’ a la various comic books etc would find himself in serious trouble. Examples are all around. Look at how an elephant, not to add a brontosaurus, has to be proportioned to support itself. MsGuy 1 Quote