No, a rubber band is not waterproof. It is made of rubber, which is a material that is permeable to water and can absorb it to some extent.
It depends on the rubber band if is a small rubber band then it will go about 20'and if it is an bigger rubber band then it will go about 35' but it depends on the rubber band and the way you shoot the rubber band
This depends on the size of the rubber band, the materials and impurities in the rubber band, and the speed at which you stretch it, as well as the conditions that the rubber band has been under.
i don't know a hundred, but you could make a rubber band gun, and a rubber band ball, or a rubber band chain. just look on youtube for instructions.
rubber band
Yes and no. Rubber bands can float and sink in water. They will float on the water for awhile and then will sink. But not all the time the rubber bands will float on the water for awhile. Sometimes it will immediately sink.
The band will sink.
No, a rubber band is not waterproof. It is made of rubber, which is a material that is permeable to water and can absorb it to some extent.
Rubber bands typically are not damaged by water.
Where is the rubber tube in the sink? The sprayer has a hose on it that is usually vinyl. The drain may be plastic or PVC, but there shouldn't be any rubber hose connected with a kitchen sink.
It depends on the person. Find out their fears, and prank them with that. Say they are afraid of snakes. Find rubber snakes and make them drop on the soon-to-be-pranked person, or put the rubber snakes in their bathroom, etc. A good idea: DONT TURN ON THE SINK. (kitchen sink) Wrap a rubber band around the spray nozzle button, and overlap it a couple times. That way, the rubber band [or hair tie] is squeezing the button shut, and when the pranked person turns on the sink, it sprays them. ^__^
It depends on the rubber band if is a small rubber band then it will go about 20'and if it is an bigger rubber band then it will go about 35' but it depends on the rubber band and the way you shoot the rubber band
You can sink rubber completely in water if you want to, but you may need to hold some rubber objects down there. A few forms of rubber have densities less than the density of water, and they float in water if they're not weighted down somehow.
a rubber band is organic
A rubber band is an insulator as it does not allow electrons to pss through it
This might be best determined by experiment. While natural rubber is slightly denser than water and will sink, there will be some small amount of air trapped in a rubber band ball, reducing the density to some extent. Attempting to model and calculate the air content seems somewhat impractical without experimental data, and if you are going to experiment anyway, why not just find the answer directly?
a rubber band is still rubber because if u stretch it it wont change