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No, it is not.
no wood is not stronger than steel. yes becasue steel is stronger than wood.
Collagen Fibers, made up of fibrous protein, which are bundled together into thick collagen fibers. Collagen fibers are extremely tough and provides high tensile strength (which provides resistant property of tendons) Stress tests have show collagen fibers to be stronger than steel fibers of the same size.....EB
The heat number refers to a heat lot quantity of steel. This number follows the steel through the production process. Each heat lot is assigned a specific heat number and it is specific for the grade of steel and the production mill. The heat number is not specific to a certain size of steel. Many sizes could be rolled from the same heat number, but usually will have some sort of suffix added to the heat number (e.g. P78323-2 where P78323 may refer to M-4 high speed steel and 2 refers to the second size produced from that heat.) The next time that this grade and size is produced it will have a different heat number and suffix.
What matters heres is the Moon's mass, as well as its distance. With a more massive Moon (and in the same orbit), the tides would of course be stronger.
In some cases, depending on the size and weight of tubular steel pipe vs the same or similar size solid steel bar, the tubular steel might be stronger. The molecular structure of the solid steel have the molecules stacked close together, any shock or stress will compress the molecules closer together with no place to go unless the steel bends or breaks. A steel tube has the hollow area which allows shock or stress to be released, it will be less likely to bend or break. It also depends on what the application is tubular steel will definitely be lighter in weight, can be filled, run wiring or plastic tubing through it. Cost is cheaper.
yes
No, it is not.
What size is the steel brake line tubing on a 1994 Ford Ranger
5/16 Flexible steel tubing.
no wood is not stronger than steel. yes becasue steel is stronger than wood.
The size of the tubing remains the same throughout the length of the instrument
The size of the tubing remains the same throughout the length of the instrument.
Standard aquarium tubing is 1/4" in diameter.
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steel because of the sheer amount of mass in the steel it is an obvious winImproved AnswerIt depends on the tank size, but in general steel is lighter out of the water. This is because steel is stronger than aluminum and you don't need as much metal to hold the pressure. If you put a steel tank next to an aluminum you will notice the steel is a smaller size for size even though it holds the same amount of gas. The aluminum tank is larger since it needs more metal to hold the pressure and thus is heavier. But steel is also more negative in the water so you can take some weight off your weight belt too.
a wolverine will beat a grizzly his own size, they are fearless and have sharp claws plus they are stronger in the same size!!