(1,500 pounds) x (60 inches) / (12 inches per foot) = 7,500 foot-pounds
The net force on a 7 pound object that is falling (accelerating down) is 7 pounds. If it is not falling or moving at a constant speed, it is zero.
The weigh the same. A pound is a pound is a pound no matter what the object is.
the answer is 50 pounds.
A British pound coin is 22.5 millimetres in diameter (0.89 inches) and is 3.15 millimetres thick (0.124 inches).
(6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Steel ≈ 666.86173743 kilogram (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Steel ≈ 1470.178471983556 pound (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Aluminum ≈ 229.36645746 kilogram (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Aluminum ≈ 505.666480809631 pound (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Iron ≈ 662.61421044 kilogram (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Iron ≈ 1460.814277894489 pound (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Copper ≈ 758.608320414 kilogram (6 inches) * (6 inches) * (12 feet) of Copper ≈ 1672.445064307409 pound
Baseball
A one pound force applied in a pulling fashion on an object.
Inches and pounds have nothing to do. Inches are units of distance/length, pounds are units of weight.
Inches and pounds are not equivalent units.
Inches are a measure of length, pounds are a measure of weight. They don't convert.
What is "a one hundred pound object" ? That's a peculiar label to put on anything, since we know that the same object has different weights in different places ... you know that too, or you wouldn't be asking the question. I can only assume that you're calling it a "one hundred pound object" because it weighs 100 pounds when it's on the surface of the Earth. If that's true, then it becomes a "106.5 pound object" on Saturn.
The answer is 6.350 kg (approx.). Kilogram is the SI unit of mass and pound is an imperial unit of mass. To convert from pound to kg, multiply the pound unit by 0.453592.