I dunno
And I dont think that would work, something to do with weight distribution
Sup Veeky Forums
I highly doubt you could carry that by yourself unless you regularly strength train. I'm pretty strong and moving around my 50kg plates is a pain in the ass. It would require pretty much all my strength to move both of them at the same time.
Put one end on a brick, just barely, and put the other end on a small block of wood in center of scale. Make sure it's level. Read scale and multiply by two.
Could also rotate 180, redo and average to account for density variation.
try to measure the force of gravity on it. then, just divide by 10
Yeah I used to go to the gym and I am quite strong, not Veeky Forums tier but I beat 85% of normies
Still it was a struggle getting them up stairs and carrying in general
That could work, do I just rest half of the block on a brick and other half on scale to get half the weight?
How the fuck would I do that? Do I have a gravity calculator?
>That could work, do I just rest half of the block on a brick and other half on scale to get half the weight?
I think so. The downward force on the two ends should be about the same if it's level. There may be a difference in density from one end to the other, and that could affect things. Rotating it 180 and doing it again and averaging should compensate for that.
What I would do if I could not lift it:
1) Look carefully at what material it is made. What kind of stones, what kind of clay etc.
2) Look up the densities of said materials.
3) By looking at the structure, estimate the amount of compressed air that you have to substract from the calculation. If unsure, assume close packing of equal spheres.
4) Take into account the inside might be hallow.
If you can lift it, have a piston system and find appropriate counterweight with known mass.
Scales work on springs. Think of the springs as series, adding the weights actually works in this case.
Thus guys is smart
I tried it using a plank