ChatterBank6 mins ago
Weight
If you were to take a 10kg bag into a pressurised aeroplane cabin would it weigh more in that cabin than in the non-pressurised hold?
Yes or no answers would be fine.
many thanks
warpig
Yes or no answers would be fine.
many thanks
warpig
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No, it doesn't weigh more, it weighs less.
The mass is the same in both places, because mass is just the amount of matter. When the bag is in the hold it displaces some air. The 'plane doesn't have to carry the air that has been displaced, so the effective weight of the bag is reduced.
When the bag is in the cabin it displaces more air because the air is denser in the cabin. So the effective weight of the bag is reduced more than before.
I don't know what Jake means by "However the net weight of the whole plane will be the same". The gross weight of the plane will be less because less air will be carried.
The mass is the same in both places, because mass is just the amount of matter. When the bag is in the hold it displaces some air. The 'plane doesn't have to carry the air that has been displaced, so the effective weight of the bag is reduced.
When the bag is in the cabin it displaces more air because the air is denser in the cabin. So the effective weight of the bag is reduced more than before.
I don't know what Jake means by "However the net weight of the whole plane will be the same". The gross weight of the plane will be less because less air will be carried.
I guess I'm mystified by the debate since anything in the aircraft, bag or no, has no bearing on the weight of the aircraft. The fact that the cabin and some of the cargo holds are pressurized makes no difference whatever. Everything in the aircraft (and, of course, the aircraft itself) is borne by the aircraft. If it weighed X pounds sitting on the end of the runway, it will weigh exactly the same in flight (other than the obvious loss of weight by the fuel burned @ 6.79 pounds per gallon). Old story about a flock of chickens in the back of a truck (excuse me... lorry)... would the truck weigh less if they all suddenly took flight? No... because they've simply tranferred their weight to the air which is still contained by the truck...
Jake's analogy is flawed by the same scenario... the buoyancy of which he speaks doesn't exist since... just as on the surface of the earth, the air pressure surrounding the bag exerts the same pressure on every square inch of the bag. Fact is, the air pressure on the surface of the earth (assuming sea level) is actually higher than the pressure inside of the aircraft, since at say Flight Level 350 (35,000 feet above sea level) the air pressure is equivalent to about 8,000 feet above sea level on earth...
This would remain true, even if the bag were a balloon filled with helium... the weight (let us simplify the discussion by not confusing mass with weight, OK?) is contained by the aircraft...
Jake's analogy is flawed by the same scenario... the buoyancy of which he speaks doesn't exist since... just as on the surface of the earth, the air pressure surrounding the bag exerts the same pressure on every square inch of the bag. Fact is, the air pressure on the surface of the earth (assuming sea level) is actually higher than the pressure inside of the aircraft, since at say Flight Level 350 (35,000 feet above sea level) the air pressure is equivalent to about 8,000 feet above sea level on earth...
This would remain true, even if the bag were a balloon filled with helium... the weight (let us simplify the discussion by not confusing mass with weight, OK?) is contained by the aircraft...