Sorry, but this logic is incorrect. Reducing the volume (really cross-sectional area) of any passage, whether it's a hose, river, tunnel, valley or whatever, will slow down a fluid passing through if a constant pressure is acting against it, which is the opposite of what you are suggesting. The exception to this would be a very specific local constriction which could create a local venturi effect, but this would not be created by tide.The logic behind it is so simple, the higher the tide the less room to move for the wind, the faster it has to travel (same volume).
Users browsing this forum: Baidu [Spider], bittersvolcom, Blackened, Brent NKB, Da Yoda, Deaimel, decay, EscSpace, handy, i_love_storm, jjm, Kuwaiti, Manxman, Peter_Frank, rickybobbyalex, Templeam, thatwildtype, Tiiga, Yahoo [Bot] and 372 guests