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.
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.
Yes, 2400 oz is more than 200 lb because 2400 oz is equivalent to 150 lb, which is less than 200 lb.
38 lbs weighs more than 576 oz. 1 lb is equivalent to 16 oz, so 38 lbs is equivalent to 608 oz, which is more than 576 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.
There are 32,000 ounces in a ton, so 50 tons of metal would be 1,600,000 ounces in total.
No 4 lbs is greater than 40 oz
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)