full bottles are top heavy. half full one's are not. The above answer is only true if the bottle is shaped so there is more water in the top half then the bottom half when full. Otherwise the bottle is not top heavy. It is just as heavy (or sometimes only slightly less heavy) on top as it is on bottom. Where as a half empty bottle has a heavier base to keep it from toppling over easier. The same principle is used in the engineering of skyscrapers. The foundation goes deep into the ground and weighs many times the weight of the top so it will not fall because of a windy day.
full bottles are top heavy. half full one's are not. The above answer is only true if the bottle is shaped so there is more water in the top half then the bottom half when full. Otherwise the bottle is not top heavy. It is just as heavy (or sometimes only slightly less heavy) on top as it is on bottom. Where as a half empty bottle has a heavier base to keep it from toppling over easier. The same principle is used in the engineering of skyscrapers. The foundation goes deep into the ground and weighs many times the weight of the top so it will not fall because of a windy day.
The water in the bottle has room to move when it is half full; it ends up sloshing around trying to remain at its initial position, and much of the energy goes into moving the water instead of the water+bottle.
Unless it's a raucous frat party, yes.
Charlotte, the half-sister is the killer.
less than a full bottle... by about 95%... it looks like you'd be lucky to get $25 for it.
A split of champagne is a half bottle
Mix half and half with distilled water (can buy pre-mixed) and pour into the overflow bottle up to the full mark.
I always drink a full bottle to a bottle and a half of water and take two Motrin (I usually get deep tissue massages) incase of soreness later on.
Usually a couple of hours for me. I never take a full bottle. A half bottle cleans my pipes like nothing else can.
Yes, a 1750 ml bottle is smaller than a half-gallon bottle. A half-gallon is equivalent to approximately 1892 ml, so 1750 ml is less than that. Therefore, the 1750 ml bottle holds less liquid than a half-gallon bottle.
When you blow across a glass bottle that is a quarter full, the pitch will be lower compared to when it is half full. This is because the amount of air present in the bottle affects the pitch produced, with less air resulting in a lower pitch.