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I received giant ice ball makers for cocktails as a groomsman gift once. Very handy. Keeps your drink cold for a long time without watering down your beverage.My day has been good, bordering on great so far. Thanks for asking.
Quote from: TownieCat on December 07, 2015, 10:46:36 AMI received giant ice ball makers for cocktails as a groomsman gift once. Very handy. Keeps your drink cold for a long time without watering down your beverage.My day has been good, bordering on great so far. Thanks for asking.How is this achieved? The amount of cumulative cooling would be proportional to how much ice was melted, regardless of the shape.
Quote from: Emo EMAW on December 07, 2015, 11:15:31 AMQuote from: TownieCat on December 07, 2015, 10:46:36 AMI received giant ice ball makers for cocktails as a groomsman gift once. Very handy. Keeps your drink cold for a long time without watering down your beverage.My day has been good, bordering on great so far. Thanks for asking.How is this achieved? The amount of cumulative cooling would be proportional to how much ice was melted, regardless of the shape.A larger piece of ice cools (and melts) more slowly than several small pieces because the surface area to volume ratio is smaller for the big piece of ice.
Quote from: Mrs. Gooch on December 07, 2015, 11:17:07 AMQuote from: Emo EMAW on December 07, 2015, 11:15:31 AMQuote from: TownieCat on December 07, 2015, 10:46:36 AMI received giant ice ball makers for cocktails as a groomsman gift once. Very handy. Keeps your drink cold for a long time without watering down your beverage.My day has been good, bordering on great so far. Thanks for asking.How is this achieved? The amount of cumulative cooling would be proportional to how much ice was melted, regardless of the shape.A larger piece of ice cools (and melts) more slowly than several small pieces because the surface area to volume ratio is smaller for the big piece of ice.If it's melting slower, then it is also cooling less. Do people want to drink warmer drinks for longer? Seems like a backwards way of doing it.
ice at 0 c would cool a beverage in direct proportion to volume of melt, but ice is kept colder than 0 c, so it doesn't.
real world models don't agree with emo