because the chain weighs it down
amazing
When a part rusts, it typically becomes heavier in weight because rust is formed when iron reacts with oxygen in the presence of moisture, adding weight to the original material.
It certainly would be heavier. Air has mass and will add weight.
A bike gets heavier after rusting because rust is the result of iron reacting with oxygen in the air to form iron oxide. Iron oxide has a greater mass than iron alone, adding to the weight of the bike.
Physical changes are changes that only change the appearance of an object, but not the type of matter. For example, if a metal bike rusts the bike will still remain a solid. That is a physical change.
Bigger cc = bigger motor = more power. But also heavier bike.
No.Momentum is a combination of weight and speed, so something lighter travelling faster can easily have the same momentum as something heavier travelling slower.So, if the bigger bike also is the heavier bike, and the bikes are always travelling at the same speed, then it will have more momentum.Otherwise, anything goes.
If the bicycles are otherwise comparable, you'll burn the same amount of calories. If the steel bike is heavier, you'll burn a few more calories on that one.
some are some arent it depends on the bike some are way heavier than others but nine times out of ten yes.
It's heavy and it rusts.
You would be much heavier on earth- about 12 times heavier.
not necessarily. depends what type of terrain you are on. or what incline