We have to assume that the question is saying that the 200-N is the minimum force required to cause the plank to just barely rotate. When the rotation begins, we have a simple lever on one brick, and we can forget about the second brick. The child is standing on the lever's short arm. The child's first moment is (200N x 0.5m), and the first moment of the short piece of plank is (0.1W x 0.25m). The sum of moments on the short side is (100 + 0.025W). On the long side, the moment is (0.9W x 2.25) = (2.025W) . The moments on both sides are equal ===> (100 + 0.025W) = (2.025W) 100 = 2W ===> W = 50N
900
The pyramids are not made of bricks, they are made of hand cut limestone blocks some weighing many tons.
Aerocon bricks are light weight bricks, the bricks are casted leaving the pores in the brick, which reduces the unit weight of brick, which inturn reduces the weight coming on the structure.- K @ $ !civil engineering - GITAM UNIVERSITY
Bricks on a brick house only support the weight of the bricks. So, as long as the paper could support the weight of the paper, it could support it's own weight. Providing it did not get wet... and tripple in weight.
3 cats
a dozen bricks because bricks weight more than eggs..... if u have 12 eggs and 12 bricks in separate bags what bag would be heavier...the bag of bricks a dozen bricks because bricks weight more than eggs..... if u have 12 eggs and 12 bricks in separate bags what bag would be heavier...the bag of bricks
about 2500 lbs
because they are shaped cimetricly allowing for uniform positioning of them.
Divide the weight by the volume.
Weight is measured in Newtons, whereas kilograms measure mass. So, if your question was about mass, two bricks would have a mass of 4 kilograms.
pyramids were usually made of bricks, sandstone, or even sometimes stone weighing 2.5 tons!
In most cases you can find the weight of a brick from Bricklink an unofficial LEGO site that takes weight measurements from user submitted data. Bricklink states the 1x4 brick as 1.64 grams in weight. LEGO bricks tend to be odd weights because the design process primarily focusses on the physical aspect. A 1x8 and 2x4 brick both have exactly eight studs, yet the weight between them differs by almost a gram. In the interest of scientific accuracy, I would recommend weighing the bricks yourself with digital kitchen scales to confirm the weight.