That describes your efforts to a T. You constantly assume that some level of expertise is directly transferable to another completely unrelated field
At the same time you vastly underestimate the complexity of the issue.
Possibly. But I believe Braenig's SIMPLE spreadsheet solution predicts performance reasonably well - even with Jay's approval, in general.
Why? Because just because Rocket's are involved, doesn't mean it can't also be modeled with Newtonian math, just as Braeunig did.
In the end, after all the "rocket sciency complex stuff is done" the end result is a "NET THRUST" - which then fits cleanly into Newtonian equations.
At "Steady state" (achieved fairly quickly, well-enough) - the modeling is fairly simple -- I'll do this up for the SLS, and SaturnV (to compare against Braeunig), and see how it turns out.
I might be eating my own foot ... or I might not.
Dunning Kruger applies heavily, IMO, to politics -- where everyone thinks they know "what's best for the nation/economy/etc" -- but we don't.
You might think "Electrical Engineering is very complex" - as parts of it are... but a LOT of it boils down to "Volts = Amps * Resistance"... for parallel or serial circuits. I learned this in 7th grade, and won a science fair for it. Normal algebra is all it takes. Just like Newtonian physics.
And even the inside the wires, the trillions of electron interactions going on -- there is a lot of complexity, and reflections and inefficiencies -- but that ALL DROPS OUT (99.9%) for MANY cases.
If you were trying to prove something wrong that I didn't want you to prove wrong -- I'd take an approach like Jay - make you dig into differential equations and imaginary numbers to determine the transmission line qualities of the various wires... and the conductance of the wire material, etc... And look for ways to discredit you -- so that we'd not have to finish the proof.
This is what has been happening on the other thread.
Static Pressure Thrust boils down to some simple equations to provide a "good enough estimate" - such that we can quickly determine if "Static Pressure Thrust" has any chance of explaining the 2.5x higher than normal acceleration we're seeing for the first full second.
I predict he'll find a way to prevent us from getting to the end of this road, doing his best to make it sound way more complicated than it needs to be (to get a 90%+ accurate enough result).