Assume spinning the end of the test tube makes a total diameter of 12.8 cm. = 5.04 inches /12 = .42 feet * 3.14 * 60 * 110,000rpm / 5280 = 1648.5 mphA Colt .45 is just over 500 mph
Sent from my iPhoneI assume since you say eppendorfs, you're making an analytical ultra (as opposed to preparative). As someone gives below, the 5.56 NATO round is 11.8 grams of copper jacketed lead rifled at ~950 m/s. Assuming your 3.5 cm radius (assumed from 200,000G <-> 70,000 rpm), your eppendorfs will be ~1.2 g of plastic jacketed water travelling (tumbling) at ~250 m/s. About 1/3 the mass and 3X the velocity of a paintball. I wouldn't want to take one in the mouth, neck, eye, or groin unprotected, but with goggles and a lab coat I wouldn't be too worried about projectiles.As others point out, the question is more about how quickly is your rotor going to wear out. I think with plastic, you should make an effective system for collecting the rotor pieces and consider them and consider them single use/disposable.--
On Wednesday, February 29, 2012 9:49:14 AM UTC-6, Richard Proctor wrote:im going to be working on cathals dremelfuge. ive found a US company
called Portescap who manufacture very high RPM brushless motors that
can hit in excess of 70,000 RPM or 200,000 G .
My main concern is whether the material in 3D printing can really deal
with those kind of forces.
The balance must be that the thing is light enough to not cause the
motor to lower its RPM but be stable enough to not cause eppendorf
bullets :-s
thoughts anyone....i'll be running FEA analysis on selection of
polymers in the next week.
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A direct hit from a rubber bullet to the eye stands a good chance of
killing you, and I expect an eppendorf at 50,000 rpm to the eye does
too.
--mlp
Assume spinning the end of the test tube makes a total diameter of 12.8
cm. = 5.04 inches /12 = .42 feet * 3.14 * 60 * 110,000rpm / 5280 = 1648.5
mph
Assume spinning the end of the test tube makes a total diameter of 12.8
cm. = 5.04 inches /12 = .42 feet * 3.14 * 60 * 50,000rpm / 5280 = 749
mph
Hardly. Getting punctured by a flimsy tube filled with water would
cause some lacerations, or a hole through your chest cavity at worst.
(Your heart is behind some pretty thick bone - no eppendorf tube is
going to get through that.) Neither of those would kill a person,
unless (as Meredith pointed out) you had the extremely bad luck of
catching it someplace where very little stands between it and your
brain. Anything less than brain or heart damage isn't going to kill a
person.
That's not saying you shouldn't be careful - just that a flying
eppendorf doesn't spell certain doom. You could still injure yourself
badly.
> Think of the IEDs using a less dense thin copper plate to destroy the most
> heavily armored tank.
You're talking about an EFP (explosively formed penetrator), which is
an apples to oranges comparison. An EFP uses an explosive charge to
turn a shaped copper disc into a jet of molten metal traveling at
extremely high velocities (8,000 meters/second or higher) to penetrate
armor. A centrifuge has a small, solid piece of plastic in it, at
roughly room temperature, traveling at (if we're to accept these
calculations) 1648.5 mph, which is about 737 meters per second.
Getting hit by one won't be comfortable - it may even cause a serious
injury - but the comparison to an EFP is not reasonable.
-Dan
Anything less than brain or heart damage isn't going to kill a
person.
a hole through your chest cavity at worst.
Neither of those would kill a person,
If you get hit in an artery, direct pressure or a tourniquet and
lactate ringer will keep you alive until you get to the hospital.
(Unless you're one unlucky S.O.B., in which case you're dead anyway.)
Battlefield first aid for sucking chest wounds is trivial. I'm
qualified to deal with any of those wounds, and I'm not even a medic.
But regardless, a flying piece of plastic isn't going to blast open a
major artery and cause you to bleed out :P I don't have the math
skills to calculate the probability of this is, but I'm quite certain
it's very low. We should focus on what's infinitely more likely -
that if someone tries to create an ultracentrifuge at home, they will
seriously injure themselves in some non-life-threatening way. "You
could die" is seldom taken seriously, while "you could seriously
injure yourself, likely badly enough to require hospitalization, and a
permanent and life-altering maiming is not out of the question" is
more likely to be heeded.
-Dan
You could easily be blinded with an eppendorf (or part of the plastic
centrifuge rotor that was discussed much earlier in this thread), and
then knock stuff over (open flames,
chemicals which burn or explode or poison), which could result in
pretty bad things.
--
Nathan McCorkle
Rochester Institute of Technology
College of Science, Biotechnology/Bioinformatics
Yes. You could start an article of clothing on fire, and then
(because you've been blinded and can't see that it's burning) wear it
to a social gathering, and everyone there would start on fire from
your burning clothes, and then they would all go home and start their
houses on fire, and... man. That would be just as bad as the bad as
the freak gas fight accident that killed my friend and world-famous
supermodel.
All this thinking is making my head hurt. I'm going to get an orange
mocha frappucino.
-Dan
The hole method stops so many people from wanting
that design -- it would be so inconvenient.
Concrete multi layered containers with steel and glass fiber reinforcement
seems a more productive path for conversation.
As far as worry and liability, the ones that will build will, and the ones that are afraid
of it won't have any fully assembled guaranteed ultracentrifuge to buy from me, that
is for sure. My first kit centrifuges will probably go to a whopping 200 RPM
as part of an incubator shaker function in a multipurpose modular
parallel liquid processing machine I'm dreaming up. But later? Why not a 5000 RPM version
and then more?
Most tabletop microtube centrifuges go up to about 15000 rpm, using plastic rotors, so if you can come up with a good enclosure, I'd think you are on track
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I'm pretty sure one of them was firing eppendorf tubes. Those things
look innocent when they're sitting quietly in their packaging
material, but secretly they hunger for the succulence of human brains.
-Dan
One of my favorite childhood movies! This scene perfectly portrays how
an eppendorf could cause a major accident :D !!!!
WE MUST NOT ALLOW AN EPPENDORF GAP!