Laurie
Active member
That better? :Pitlamp said:"kg/dm?" might be more precise. (The "3" should be superscript of course but I'm far too dumb to work out how to make it go up there!)
That better? :Pitlamp said:"kg/dm?" might be more precise. (The "3" should be superscript of course but I'm far too dumb to work out how to make it go up there!)
Pitlamp said:Almost right mudman - but kg not "Kg".
Marysboy is of course right.
Nice one Laurie (you clever beggar!).
Roger W said:So one pint (or gallon) weighs what in pounds and ounces?
Laurie said:Awkward *%!&*!
OK, 1 Ltr of rain weighs 1 Kg no matter how heavy it gets. :tease:
The molecular weigh of water is 18 (oxygen (16) + 2 hydrogen (1)). Deuterium has a molecular weight of 2 so D2O 1s 20/18 times as heavy as H2O. (No doubt that will be contradicted by someone that knows at more than me about this subject).RichardB1983 said:Laurie said:Awkward *%!&*!
OK, 1 Ltr of rain weighs 1 Kg no matter how heavy it gets. :tease:
But does it if it's actually "heavy water" - D2O?
RichardB1983 said:Laurie said:Awkward *%!&*!
OK, 1 Ltr of rain weighs 1 Kg no matter how heavy it gets. :tease:
But does it if it's actually "heavy water" - D2O?
Rain weighs 1Kg/L, no matter how heavy it gets.
Fulk said:Ho hum,
Rain weighs 1Kg/L, no matter how heavy it gets.
And there I was, thinking it was a joke.
Probably shoot each other.Laurie said:How can it be that each year about 400,000 Americans are injured by their bedding or beds. Seriously - what do Americans do in or near their beds?
Only at 101.325 kPa & 20 C IIRC (been a while since I last had to do gravimetric calibration)Fulk said: