jkvcghcykic
No exact value but you can know the mass of liquid from this relation Denisty=Mass/volume so the mass=Volume*Density ,,, this is the weight of milk you can add the weight of the glass but you must first weigh it on a balance.
No exact value but you can know the mass of liquid from this relation Denisty=Mass/volume so the mass=Volume*Density ,,, this is the weight of milk you can add the weight of the glass but you must first weigh it on a balance.
It is relative to the amount of water and the weight of the glass. Obviously, an eight ounce glass of water would weigh 8 ounces plus the weight of the glass. <><><> The weight of a glass of water depends on the amount of water in the glass. A common size of water glass holds 8 fluid ounces of water. In rough terms, one ounce of water weighs one ounce (weight). This gives the answer that a glass of water weighs half a pound. (The weight of the glass is not included in this half a pound.) To be more precise, an Imperial Ounce (used in Britain) is 28.41 millilitres. This would give 8 ounces a mass of 227.3 grams. (0.500 pounds weight) In the United States, a Fluid Ounce is 29.57 millilitres, which gives a mass of 236.6 grams. (0.52 pounds weight).
If you are in the US, then glass weighs 155lbs/ft³. If you are not in the US or you want to use metric, you will have to do a conversion. 155lbs/ft³equals approximately 1.52lbs/ft² at 1/8" thickness Polyvinyl Butyral or PVB weighs .085lbs/ft² at .015" thickness. Since laminated glass is two sheets of glass "sandwiching" a sheet pf PVB, we can calculate the weight of a square foot of laminated glass consisting of two lites of 1/8" glass plus the weight of the PVB interlayer - in this case, .015". glass + interlayer + glass = 1.52lbs + .085lbs + 1.52lbs = 3.125lbs/ft² A little bit of basic arithmetic and you can get the weight of any size or thickness desired.
Depends on how big the glass is as far as height and thickness is concerned.
Glasses come in all sorts of shapes and sizes: there is no standard weight.
jkvcghcykic
If you want to lose your weight then drink atleast 14 glass of water each day.
many variables such as thickness that could effect the weight
A half inch thick tempered glass will weigh 6.75 lb/ft2. With that much thickness, it can support much of the weight of possibly a small child or small animal.
No exact value but you can know the mass of liquid from this relation Denisty=Mass/volume so the mass=Volume*Density ,,, this is the weight of milk you can add the weight of the glass but you must first weigh it on a balance.
No exact value but you can know the mass of liquid from this relation Denisty=Mass/volume so the mass=Volume*Density ,,, this is the weight of milk you can add the weight of the glass but you must first weigh it on a balance.
It is relative to the amount of water and the weight of the glass. Obviously, an eight ounce glass of water would weigh 8 ounces plus the weight of the glass. <><><> The weight of a glass of water depends on the amount of water in the glass. A common size of water glass holds 8 fluid ounces of water. In rough terms, one ounce of water weighs one ounce (weight). This gives the answer that a glass of water weighs half a pound. (The weight of the glass is not included in this half a pound.) To be more precise, an Imperial Ounce (used in Britain) is 28.41 millilitres. This would give 8 ounces a mass of 227.3 grams. (0.500 pounds weight) In the United States, a Fluid Ounce is 29.57 millilitres, which gives a mass of 236.6 grams. (0.52 pounds weight).
I would have gotten the weight of the glass g/cm3 or something and then get the size of the glass (100/50/0,5cm for instance) and calculated the size of the glass ( in this case 2500 cm3) and claculated the weight out of that (some converting processes and such)
sq weight of 1 inch glass * 26 times..
Glass weighs 162 pounds per cubic foot. Tempering adds no weight. Glass is glass, except specialty glasses like high temperature glass, which weighs slightly more.