It would be well worth your time to try it. Drill a series of 1/2"-3/4" holes directly under the depth line of the concrete floor, at a point where it should hit any fill gravel. Hopefully some of the hydrostatic pressure will be released.
when friction is pushing against it
Pushing against a brick wall is an example of a futile or pointless effort because the wall is unlikely to move or be affected by the force applied to it.
A person pushing a car to start it. A weightlifter pushing up on a barbell during a bench press. Wind pushing against a sail on a boat.
Isometric exercise involves activities like pushing against fixed surfaces, where the muscle contracts but there is no movement at the joint. It can help improve muscular strength and endurance. Examples include wall sits or pushing against a door frame.
A person pushing a bookshelf across the room. A car engine pushing the vehicle forward. Wind pushing against a sailboat, propelling it forward. A person pushing a swing to make it move. A piston pushing down in a combustion engine.
A surface pushing up, equal and opposite to a force pushing against it
15 pounds of air pressure are pushing against every square inch of your body at all times.
Pushing against a wall primarily works on strength, not flexibility. To improve flexibility, try stretching exercises that target specific muscle groups.
Yes. Since cool air tends to concentrate at lower elevations, leaving basement windows open will result in considerable wasted electricity. While the AC may not be blowing into them, warmer air from outside will convect into the basement, mixing with the colder air and pushing colder air out.
Isometric and Isotonic Contraction
no. the plates pushing against each other do.
"static"