38.89
about 190 pounds
4 grand do not buy the peices of crao
They can carry their own weight
The amount of weight a person can carry will depend upon the person. The stronger the person is, the more weight that they will be able to carry.
Really anything you want. The only limitation you have is how much weight your rocket can lift. if you exceed that your rocket will, at best, just sit on the launch pad and burn all its fuel off. Remember, every satellite or probe ever put into space was done with really big rockets.
It depends upon the weight of the total vehicle and the payload combined (including the fuel, which needs to be carried upward too). For more information, see the link below the ads. The Saturn V can carry 385.6 tonnes of propellant according to pg 244 in "The Rocket: The History and Development of Rocket & Missile Technology"
.044
2500
A large rocket holds a lot of fuel, a small rocket holds less.
Henri Richard's nickname was Pocket Rocket because he is Maurice Richard's little brother who is nicknamed Rocket because of his speed and because he is much smaller than him.
The problem with adding anything extra to a rocket is that ANY extra weight in the design of the rocket SUBTRACTS from the payload you can carry. But the whole point of a rocket is the payload; add too much parasitic weight (as in, anything you add to make it reusable) and pretty soon, your rocket can't make orbit, or hit the target, or do whatever it is that your rocket is supposed to do. The Constellation rockets are designed to be HEAVY LIFT vehicles. You cannot afford to lose any payload capacity.