!Jon Snow!
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on road? and why not cuboidal ones?
Cylinders are easier to make strong enough to hold them.!Jon Snow! said:on road? and why not cuboidal ones?
It isn't a matter of welding joints: flat surfaces bend when there is a pressure behind them while cylinders are just in tension.!Jon Snow! said:I guess less number of welding joints are required in elliptical or cylindrical vessels than cubical ones.
Crow said:Well, I've seen sharply square/rectangular swimming pools... Is that any different?
Have you seen cracks in the concrete walkway that surrounds one of those swimming pools? Oftentimes you will, and most often they'll start at a corner of the pool.Crow said:Well, I've seen sharply square/rectangular swimming pools... Is that any different?
So you do have rectangular containers for those objects. Just that they aren't used for liquids.Sweenebean said:What about small scale objects where the material could handle the forces at hand. A rectangular water bottles would ship easier in bulk and could be easily modified for ergonomics. Majority of bathroom sinks are elliptical. Hygienic products such as soaps, shampoos, and conditioners are distributed in elliptical cylinders; however, like the water bottle would be more efficient to ship in rectangular containers. This might go outside of physics I'm just curious