Anything that weighs in at more than a ton in weight, even if only measured in mircrogrammes!!
One ton.
One ton of absolutely anything weighs one ton.
There is more than one kind of Ton. 1 Metric Ton = 1000 Kilograms 1 Long Ton (UK) = 1 016.04691 Kilograms 1 Short Ton (US) = 907.18474 Kilograms
143 stone = 1 ton us
1.5 gallons of water does that. 1.5 gallons weighs 50% more than 1 gallon. If you reduce it 50%, you have 0.75 gallon, and that weighs less than 1 gallon.
It depends which ton you use. In the UK 1 ton = 1 long ton = 2240 lb → a ton of steel weighs more than 2000 lb of cotton. In the US 1 ton = 1 short ton = 2000 lb → both are the same (A "metric ton", or "tonne" is 1000 kg which is approx 2205 lb, a little less than 1 long ton.)
They both weigh the same! 1 TON and 1 TON!
A computer would be closest to a lb. (Though it weighs more). A ton is 1000 lbs, and a computer weighs no where near that. An ounce (oz) is very light and a computer weighs a lot more than 1 oz.
1 ton of hemp weighs 1 ton. 1 ton of paper weighs 1 ton.
2456 pounds
One ton weighs exactly twice a weight of 1000 pounds.
1 ton of feathers, 1 ton of coal, 1 ton of water, etc.
Last answer: "Depends of how you weigh them. A ton of cotton could weigh more than a ton of nails." Not true! A ton (2000 lbs) is just a ton. 1 thing that weighs exactly 2000 pounds, cant weigh more or less than another thing that weighs exactly 2000 pounds. This is very simple! How did you get this wrong? Or maybe he/she was referring to the fact that there are at least 3 different types of tons. I am not sure. Well anyway, the point is that they were wrong, and the question now has a correct, acceptable answer. :P
Anything that weighs 1 Mg(Mega-gram, or 1 million grams, 100 thousand more grams than a ton) or higher. For specific objects, many vehicles weight more than a ton, large buildings, etc. From the way you phrased the question, it sound like you think a ton = 1 thousand pounds, forgive me if I misunderstood that, but a ton weights 2 thousand pounds, not just 1.
One ton.
1 metric ton weighs about 2,250 pounds
The question is comparing a weight with a mass. Since the weight of a mass depends on where the mass is currently located, the kg of mass could weigh more than 1 ton in some places and less than 1 ton in other places. On Earth, 1 kg of mass weighs 2.205 pounds. That's only 0.0011 ton. On Jupiter, 1 kg of mass weighs 5.85 pounds. That's 0.0029 ton. On the Sun, 1 kg of mass weighs 61.8 pounds. That's 0.031 ton. We can see that it would have to be an awfully massive body for 1 kg of mass to weigh a ton on its surface, but it could be done. Until we start sending spacecraft to bodies like that, in all other places, 1 ton is a greater weight than the weight of 1 kg of mass.