A one foot liquid head of water will exert a force of 1.04167 psi. 27.7 inches of water = 1 psig... Mean and dirty 1foot=1/2psig
1 psi (pounds per square inch) equal 2.31 ft.
One pound of air is equal in mass to one pound of water
14 inches equals one pound of natural gas pressure
0.001 pound water (16 ounce/1 pound)(437.5 grains/1 ounce) = 7 grains ---------------
For plain water about 41.7 pounds at 8.345lbs per gallon.
That depends on what substance you're dropping. Drops of oil weigh less than drops of water, so it takes more of them to make a pound. Drops of mercury or melted lead are heavier than drops of water, so it takes fewer of them to make a pound.
One pound of air is equal in mass to one pound of water
2 cups of water is 1 pound.
2 cups of water is 1 pound.
If it's floating, then the buoyant force on it is exactly equal to its weight. (That makes the vector sum of the vertical forces zero, which is why the object is not accelerating vertically.)
For water, yes.A pint's a pound, the world around.
Only if you're measuring water
14 inches equals one pound of natural gas pressure
1 US pint of water weighs a little more than a pound
2 ounces of water is 4 tablespoons
I think water is heavier.
One cup is 250 gm or 8 ounces. So 1 pound is 2 cups.
It is a line connecting all points at which there exists an equal vertical distance between the earth's surface and the water table.