well it completely depends, some people say that a thicker heavier bit is better as it spreads the weight and pressure in the horses mouth. but this totally depends on 2 things, the ability of the rider and their skills and stregths or weaknessess but also the size of a horses mouth... this rule may well apply with a heavy cob or even section D, but with a horse with a smaller finer mouth (like my dutch warmblood) then putting a larger bit than the small one i have in could hurt and cause problems with her mouth in the near future causing to much pressure on their already fragile soft mouths.
The weight of a horse's bit depends on the weight of the horse. For a small horse or pony the bit can be a few ounces, and for a large horse it can be several pounds in weight.
A horse bit can weight anything from a few ounces to a pound or more depending on the type of the bit.
There is no 'average' weight for a mare as weight will vary from breed to breed and horse to horse. A typical riding type horse however will vary between 700-1500 pounds with 1200 pounds being the average.
it depends on which breed but shires (heaviest horse breed) weigh up to a tonne
average is 1000 lbs to 1200 lbs.
Roughly 2,200 pounds The car or the horse?
As much as an average horse, plus the horn whis is about 5 pounds.
the average horse weighs about 1000lbs, the average horse head about 20, if you assume the human is a fairly large male, then the torso, head and arms weigh about 160 lbs, so 1000+160-20=1140. So the average centaur weighs 1140 lbs.
On average, yes, the replacement parts do weigh a bit more than the natural bone.
That would be average but a bit on the skinny side...
A mass of 500 kg is the average for an adult horse. In pounds, a 500 kg horse weighs 1100 lbs.
No. An average horse's heart ranges in weight from 9-12 pounds or 4-5.5 kg.
Both can weigh about the same as the other, depending on the breed. For instance, Chianinas can weigh over 3,000 lbs and Miniature Herefords may average around 300 lbs. Miniature ponies may average the same (maybe a little lighter), and large draft breeds like the Shire may weigh over 3,000 lbs.
Well the average third grader weighs about 90 pounds while the average draft horse weighs 1,400-2,000 pounds. So that would mean you'd need 15.5-22.2 third graders to equal one draft horse.