In this context H is not normally considered a substituent.
If the C has the same number of "R's" then I guess steric factors will start to influence the "Rule".
What do you think is a reasonable explanation?
I'm just trying to get a systematic way to think about it, much like the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog Priority Rules are laid out.
So the first port of call is how many non-H substituents there are versus H substituents; whichever atom has more non-H substituents "wins" (is considered more substituted).
Among non-H substituents, how do we decide? Overall molecular weight of all the non-H substituents on one of the atoms combined, versus the same for the other?
I'm wondering if it really just follows the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog system and when it says "more substituents" it really means bigger substituents (as H is the smallest substituent possible), but I'm not too sure.