MarineHawk
Well-Known Member
They’re correct. Wind-chill affects something with an internal heat source. If, say, it’s 30 F and really windy, it makes a human body have to work much harder to sustain its internal 98.6 F temperature because it is bombarded by a greater volume of 30 F air than if there was less/no wind. However, if you died and laid there for a while, the 30 F air would reduce your body temp to 30 F and no lower no matter how much wind there was. X deg. F air cannot reduce an object below X deg. F. However, it will make it come to X deg. F faster and require more heat production to prevent that. Whiskey can’t be made colder than the outside air temperature surrounding it. It’s physics. It’s possible that the outside air was colder or the booze was weaker than you thought. Otherwise, your booze was defying basic undeniable principles of science, which seems implausible.incorrect
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