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!
Even nerdier:
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
- Neutron star material . . . 203,303,684,879,288kg / 448,207,369,758,576lb
Even nerdier:
- Vibranium . . . 0.81kg / 1.78lb
- Uru . . . 4.33kg / 9.55lb
- Kryptonite . . . 18.70kg / 41.24lb
- Adamantium . . . 205.68kg / 453.44lb