Kettlebells made out of . . . (?)

faithinmet

New member
If iron has a density of 7.87g/cm[sup]3[/sup] (according to this website) then the volume of a 16kg kettlebell must be 2,033.04cm[sup]3[/sup], right? (Density x Volume = Mass)

So let's say you want a kettlebell the size of a normal 16kg bell, but made out of something else. Here's what it would weigh!
  • Brass . . . 17.22kg / 37.96lb
  • Cadmium . . . 17.67kg / 38.95lb
  • Copper . . . 18.22kg / 40.16lb
  • Molybdenum . . . 20.74kg / 45.72lb
  • Lead . . . 22.97kg / 50.65lb
  • Uranium . . . 38.83kg / 85.61lb
  • Gold . . . 39.24kg / 86.50lb
  • Tungsten . . . 39.24kg / 86.50lb (Tungsten weighs the same a gold?)
  • Plutonium . . . 40.05kg / 88.30lb
  • Neptunium . . . 41.07kg / 90.54lb
Let's go nerdy:
I bet @janie83 could still Cossack Squat that one.

Even nerdier:
How I got the numbers: multiply the number from earlier-- 2.03304 (I moved the decimal to convert the result to kg) by the density of these other materials, it will show you how heavy a "16kg sized" kettlebell would be.
 
@fbgah Got the solution. Coat the uranium with lead. Depending on how much lead you decrease the weight and as a small benefit lead shields the ionizing radiation. Win win win.
 
@faithinmet I think there's an element called Oganesson that is also pretty damn heavy.

Go to Neptune or Jupiter and you could probably find something even heavier.

It could get to the point where all we have to do is put a ring on each middle finger made of some unknown element and swing our arms about and get abs like Thor.
 
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