- Location
- westchester
k is the one fellows
I wanna say F too...but it will only fill up to the lowest point of L. So that's what makes me say L.
These jokes are always something obscure like...oh it's obviously the tank that the water is coming from, that was filled first.
That was my reasoning as well.
The answer with out a shadow of doubt is H.....:spin:
Why would it only fill to the lowest point of L?
As the water flows from L to F and starts to fill F...once the water level in F gets equal to the bottom of L, the resistance to continue filling F is greater than the resistance for the water to start filling up L.
Anyone that's every flooded part or all of their house can attest that water seeks the path of least resistance.
I still say L. Okay, this is how I look at it. Chambers D,E and G are out because C is blocked off from reaching them. Chamber A starts to flow into B and onto C and J. In J it fills up halfway until it starts to flow into L but stops at the same level in the tube leading to I.
From there it continues to flow into chamber L and into the tubes to H(blocked) and F as the tubes fill up it starts to flow into F. When the level in F reaches the lowest point in chamber L it stops because there isn't enough pressure to force more water into F. As chamber L starts to fill it will push more water into chamber F but not before L fills up first.
It looks like chamber L would just overflow and none of the other chambers would get close to getting filled.
The OP said F is not the answer. The only way that F would fill first is if the L chamber was bigger than the F chamber. With more water volume in the L chamber there is more pressure at the tubes to force more water into the the F chamber. The chambers are open at the top so there is air pressure pushing down on the water. In order for F to fill you need more water in chamber L to counter the air pressure and push the water into chamber F.Yes, but L will never fill because , is open at bottom and F is lower, so F fill first.