by Tony » Mon Mar 30, 2009 5:26 pm
The diameter and type of tube makes absolutely no difference to how far the fluid is forced up the tube by air pressure. Make the manometer tube any convenient diameter.
The best fluid to use for a quick test is plain water straight out of the tap.
To make it a bit easier to see, get some food dye from your local supermarket. One small drop of liquid food dye will turn a surprising amount of water a very deep vivid colour.
If you use a U tube vertical manometer, one leg goes up, the other goes down an equal distance. That can be rather inconvenient to measure.
If you use a vertical tube with a well, the fluid goes up the tube, and the level falls in the well. How far each moves depends on the relative surface area of each.
If the surface area in the well is a 1,000 times the surface area in the tube (not difficult to do) then the fluid might go up the tube say 21 inches, and the fluid in the well falls by .021 inches (1/1000). This very small level change in the well can be ignored, and you can just measure the vertical rise in the manometer tube directly with a steel ruler. If it goes up 21 inches, the real actual pressure will be 21.021 inches. Close enough !!
So use a fairly skinny manometer tube, and a well with a large exposed water surface area. The well does not need to contain a large volume, just have a lot of surface area. So something wide and shallow (like a saucer) is the way to approach this.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.