780 cc of Mercury or molten lead would weigh a lot more, for instance, than the same volume of water. I would say that much water would weigh in just under 2 lbs.
Using the items listed above and figuring that 1cc = 1ml:
780ml water = 1.72 lbs
780ml lead = 19.5 lbs
780ml mercury = 23.37 lbs
Thanks Suzie. Saved me getting out my calculator.
Cannot answer this without knowing the density of the fluid. However, 1cc of water is about 1g in weight.
That completely depends on what's in those 350 cc. -- If you're on Earth, then, for example . . . - If they're full of sea-level air, then they weigh about 0.0044 newton (0.016 ounce). - If they're full of water, then they weigh about 3.43 newtons (12.35 ounces). - If they're full of gold, then they weigh about 65.6 newtons (14.74 pounds). -- If you're anywhere else but Earth, then their weights are different, even with the same substances in them. -- If the 350 cc are empty, then they have no weight at all, regardless of where you are. -- If you're in free-fall in space, then they have no weight at all, regardless of what's in them.
A mL and a cc are the exact same. So if you have 20mL, you have 20cc.
28 grams in an ounce. 780/28=27.86
780 square feet is about 72.46 square meters.
780
780-810gr.
It can weigh from 300 to 780 kilograms (660 to 1720 lb)
There are 30 cc's per ounce, so 400 cc's would weigh 13.33 ounces.
big pun weighed 780 lb's
420 lbs.
16,000 - 18,000, depending on specifics.
2 grams
A little over 18 ounces. 30 cc=1 ounce
15cc*1g/cc*(9.8m/s) = 147g = .324Lb
1005lbs
assuming water with density 1 gm/cc 550 cc = 550 gm