1 mile
The distance fragments can be propelled by 75 pounds of explosives depends on various factors such as the type of explosive, its placement, and the surrounding environment. Generally, explosives can propel fragments several hundred feet away.
The distance that 75 pounds of explosives can propel fragments varies depending on factors like the type of explosive, the containment of the explosion, and the terrain. However, explosives of this magnitude have the potential to propel fragments hundreds of feet away from the blast site.
The distance that fragments can be propelled by 75 pounds of explosive depends on the type of explosive and the surrounding environment. In general, fragments can be propelled up to a few hundred meters with that amount of explosive force.
For less than 500lbs it's 2500 feet. Anything over 500lbs is 4000 feet
10 million pounds
There are multiple states with explosives factories. There are about 174 companies in the US that make explosives. Businesses in the US use about 12 million pounds of explosives each year for mining, construction and manufacturing. I won't try to list all 174, but there are several in Utah, California, Texas, Ohio and Virginia.
In the US, we use about 5 million pounds of explosives every day in mining and construction. Compared to that, a very tiny percentage is used in criminal acts to hurt people and destroy property.
To convert 115 pounds to foot-pounds, you need to multiply by the distance in feet over which the force is applied. If the force of 115 pounds is applied over a distance of 1 foot, it would equal 115 foot-pounds. For any distance greater than 1 foot, simply multiply 115 by that distance to get the total foot-pounds.
dynamite declined in importance from about one billion pounds in the mid-1950s to approximately 100 million pounds in 1993.
Yes. It is (force x distance) or (distance x force). Same thing.
Km is short for kilometers - a unit of distance. You can't turn distance into Pounds.
Pounds is weight, kilometres is distance. No equivalent possible.