700
700 lb = 0.35 t(US)
A ton is 2,000 lb.A Metric ton is 2,200 lb.Therefore:700 tons= 1,400,000 lb.700 Metric tons= 1,540,000 lb.So the difference is: 140,000 lb.
A 700 lb. gorilla can sit wherever he wants to. : )
710 g = 1.56528 lb
1 ton is 2000 pounds, so 2 tons are 4000 pounds
3.75 pounds.
700 g = 1.54323 lb700 g = 1.54323 lb700 g = 1.54323 lb700 g = 1.54323 lb700 g = 1.54323 lb700 g = 1.54323 lb
Based on spelling of ton I presume you mean not a metric ton (or tonne): 454 g ≈ 1 lb For a long ton (as used in UK): 1 ton = 2240 lb ≈ 2240 x 454 g ≈ 1016046 g → 1016046 ÷ 700 ≈ 1451 times For a short ton (as used in USA): 1 ton = 2000 lb ≈ 2000 x 454 g ≈ 907184 g → 907184 ÷ 700 ≈ 1296 times If you actually meant a metric ton (or tonne): 1 tonne = 1000 kg = 1000000 g → 1000000 ÷ 700 ≈ 1429 times.
700 of them.
1 ton is equal to 2,000 pounds. Therefore, 700 pounds is less than half of a ton.
The cost for beef "on the hoof" is on a per pound basis, in other words in the symbol of $/lb. A lot of cattle, however, are sold on a per hundred-weight basis, or $/cwt. The "c" is originally the acronym for "cent" which is the French word for "hundred"; "wt" is an acronym for "weight." In all auction marts in North America (United States and Canada), everything is in imperial weight, or in pounds, not kilograms. Also, most costs are put in terms of live-weight. Thus if you see, for example, $70/cwt for 700 lb steers, this means that you will be paying $70 per one hundred pounds for those steers, which adds up to $490 in total for one 700 lb steer. On a per lb basis, that's $0.70/lb for each 700 lb steer. Currently (as of December 19, 2012), and fortunately, prices for a 700 lb beef steer are much higher than that right now. The Triple J Livestock report puts steers in the 700-800 lb category at an average of $1.34/lb live-weight. See the related link below.
it depends on the breed but mostly 7-8 months.