Want this question answered?
It sinks in the liquid. A steel bolt has a density greater that that of water. Drop it in water, it sinks.
Both are static electricity.
It all depends on the size of the three items - a metal cube with volume 1 cm3 will weigh far less than one of the bolts they used to attach the space shuttle to the launch pad, correct? And it also depends on the metals in question - an iridium cube will weigh more than a magnesium nut made from the same volume of metal, because iridium is very heavy and magnesium is much lighter. If you had these three objects all of the same metal and they all weighed the same, the cube would be smaller because a cube is a more compact shape than a nut or bolt.
Because he is the son of persidon and Zesus thinks that persidon might of given the bolt to his son.And also because no one would think that a greek god would give a LIGHNING BOLT to a half blood human ,you know it's unexpected!!!:)
something electrical I would assume
There is no density of a bolt
On a five bolt pattern measure from outer edge of one bolt then across to the middle of another skipping one bolt hole( not quite the diameter). On six or four bolt patterns measure across from bolt center to bolt center as you would the diameter if it were a circle.
10.1
That would be different from bike to bike. Get a vernier caliper and measure it.
Yes.
With a tape measure.
The Threads on a Bolt are the ridges or grooves that screws into a Nut or into a metal frame or such.
Using a nut and bolt made up of the same metal is preferred in order to avoid corrosion.
a good way to remove a metal bolt is to get a screw extractor. You drill a small pilot hole down the middle of the bolt, and lightly tap the extractor into the hole. The bolt will then twist out. You may need to add lube to the bolt if its rusted (WD-40 etc.)
Book of Bolt Action Rifles should help
Hardness
I hope you mean a 5/8 bolt (58 inches would take a machine to turn). Measure your bolt head across the opposing flats. For a 5/8 bolt it may be 1 inch or even larger. The last one I did was in a truck's shock mounting and that took a 1.25 inch socket.