
, you are ticking all the boxes of what myself and the others have said in the past about ignoring and deflection, refusing to be drawn into details and going on about Blue Peter barometers.
Nope. The issue is about the simplicity of what's been said.
I don't expect you to go along with it because your mindset is of a spinning globe with gravity and a 93 million miles sun plus a 240,000 mile moon supposedly doing what you've been told, in terms of the tides and what not.
I have no reason to want to change your mind on anything like that. You can go to your end with that thought but I won't be.
Everything is in or faces and simple. It's just a case of wanting to see it and basically reverse engineering the set up.
The bottom line is that no home made jar of water pressure gauge is going to be more accurate than a digital one.
I didn't think you'd get it.
It's about visual of the water rise and fall not a digital readout.
I’ve got 3 little temperature display units in my house because I wanted to graph over the year how the house performs thermally. The best sensor to use for them also has a pressure meter (BME280). In my veg garden, I wanted soil moisture sensors to alert me with when I needed to water or automatically water if I’m away. I thought I may as well put a temperature sensor in those, so I’ve got 6 accurate digital pressure meters that have been running and graphing pressure all year. I don’t need to check a home made diy job every half hour and mark it down with a pencil.
You can do as many little experiments as you want. You know for a fact there's pressure change but you're not measuring water change.
I've just handed you a simple experiment to do with that youtube video. Pat attention to the water rise and fall and while you do that think about it on a mammoth scale with oceans and such as the energy is moving over that area pushing it down bit by bit and it has to go somewhere, which is why tides happen. Water rises bit by bit as the pressure builds slowly. Then when the energy passes by the water lowers and the tides go in, slowly but surely.
This is why it happens over hours.
What I don’t see is this mythical 12 hour pressure wave passing over the planet, pushing the oceans. Worldwide there is loads of professional weather data that also fails to record this pressure. It doesn’t exist, so for your explanation then think again.
You do see it but your observations are due to gravitational pull or whatever you go with.
But what I find funny is it demonstrates how daft your bath tub experiment is.
Absolutely not.
I asked 3 times and you deliberately avoided the questions. Why can’t you measure this pressure and why can’t you see it in a bath. We both know that if the answer is “because the effect is too slight in a bath and the pressure wave is too small to measure but has an effect when applied to something as big as the ocean”, that is exactly the same answer we give when you doubt the effect of the moons gravity in the tides or expect to see the curve of the earth in something as small as a bath.
I've shown you in the youtube video.
I think you have tied yourself in a knot with this one.
Not in the least.
Your pressure wave is easily disproved.
Clearly not.
That is not doubt, that is not perception, that is not sitting on the bog saying “makes no sense to me”, that is no pressure wave such as you describe has ever been recorded by anything anywhere.
And yet you happily sit there and believe in gravity.
I'm more than content with what I go with.
So as well as heat and light, this projector site blasts out a high pressure wind jet that sweeps over the oceans, blasting them in the middle, pushing up tides.
Nope, not at all.
The high pressure wind, as you call it is a vortex to the centre.
It's a feed.
This same vortex gets weaker and weaker the farther outwards it is.
But this effect has never been detected and passes through clouds without affecting them. And you call the evidence for other models irrational
It is detected but it's detected on a small scale on land and on ships and what not with simple barometers and other instruments that measure small changes.