no, they're basically the same, just in different form.
1 lb = 16 oz 80 oz = 5 lbs 6 lbs is 6 lbs You decide
They are equal.
no 10 times more . 1 lb = 16 oz 10 lb = 160 oz 100 lb = 1,600 oz
2 lbs is greater than 27 oz. There are 16 oz in one lb so two lbs is 32 oz.
Yes.
no. a ton is 2000 lbs
A computer would be closest to a lb. (Though it weighs more). A ton is 1000 lbs, and a computer weighs no where near that. An ounce (oz) is very light and a computer weighs a lot more than 1 oz.
(1 ton) x (2000 lbs/ton) x (16 oz/lb) = 32,000 oz.
1 lb = 16 oz 80 oz = 5 lbs 6 lbs is 6 lbs You decide
first, you gotta think, there are 2,000 lbs in a ton and 16 oz in a pound, so 16 X 2,000 = ?
They are equal.
2000 lbs. = 1 ton --- 16 oz. = 1 lb. (2000 lbs.)(16 oz.) = 32,000 oz. (32,000 oz.)(50 tons) = 1,600,000 oz
No 4 lbs is greater than 40 oz
If there are 16 ounces in a pound, and 2000 pounds in a ton, then there are 32,000 ounces in a ton.
1 lb = 16 oz . . 10 lb = 160 oz 200 oz is more than that.
One ton
This depends on your definition of the ton. I will assume a standard internationally defined ounce. 1 oz = 1/16 lb = 28.3495231 g If you mean the short ton (US), then 1 ton = 2000 lbs 65 megaton = 130,000,000,000 lbs = 2,080,000,000,000 oz (2.08 trillion ounces) If you mean the long ton (Imperial), then: 1 ton = 2240 lbs 65 megaton = 145,600,000,000 lbs = 2,329,600,000,000 oz (2.33 trillion ounces) If you mean tonne (or "metric ton"), then: 1 t = 1,000,000 g 65 Mt = 65,000,000 t = 65,000,000,000,000 g ≈ 2.29 × 1012 oz (2.29 trillion ounces)