steverothery;2305956; said:You are wrong about your last point - you don't understand it.
Pressure = force / Area Pressure on high points increases MASSIVELY and thats when foam or styro interfaces work.
What I am getting at is still being missed. The amount of pressure exerted at the specific points varies. But you also have to look at the properties of the foam in itself. The foam will have a certain compression point. Once that foam compresses, you have support. But when certain points of the tank are higher, there will be less compression. Less compression does not equal support. It may serve to fill in a gap or two, btu I do not believe that there is any "extra" support given.
BTW, let's keep the finger pointing to a minimum here. I opened this to be a discussion. I do not claim to be right, nor do I claim to understand the situation. Hence, why I asked for discussion and factual data. Opinions are better left to the poll itself. If you would like to prove your point. Please show us a demonstration other than saying P=F/A. Not everyone here is a physics major, but I'm sure we would all like to see supportive information in this argument.




