The femur is the strongest and thickest bone in the body. It can take about 600 LBS of vertical force before it breaks. That pretty much means that if you set it up so it was horizontal, with a space in between the things holding it up, and put 600 pounds on it, it would snap. That's strong.
The femur, the strongest bone in the human body, can withstand compressive forces of around 1,700 to 2,500 pounds-force per square inch (psi) before breaking.
The maximum load-bearing capacity of the femur bone can vary depending on factors like age, sex, and overall health of the individual. On average, the femur bone can withstand a compressive load of around 1,700 to 2,500 pounds before breaking. However, this can vary greatly in different individuals.
The strongest bone in the human body is the femur, also known as the thighbone. It is the longest and heaviest bone in the body, designed to bear the majority of the body's weight and withstand high levels of stress and impact.
The femur, or thigh bone, is the strongest human bone. It is resilient due to its dense structure and ability to withstand high amounts of stress and weight-bearing.
The Femur is the strongest bone in the body.
10-15
The femur, the strongest bone in the human body, can withstand compressive forces of around 1,700 to 2,500 pounds-force per square inch (psi) before breaking.
A femur bone can withstand roughly 4000 N of force.
The maximum load-bearing capacity of the femur bone can vary depending on factors like age, sex, and overall health of the individual. On average, the femur bone can withstand a compressive load of around 1,700 to 2,500 pounds before breaking. However, this can vary greatly in different individuals.
The femur (bone in upper leg) can take the most pressure before breaking.
The strongest bone in the human body is the femur, also known as the thighbone. It is the longest and heaviest bone in the body, designed to bear the majority of the body's weight and withstand high levels of stress and impact.
The femur, or thigh bone, is the strongest human bone. It is resilient due to its dense structure and ability to withstand high amounts of stress and weight-bearing.
The Esttionfachinist Medui is the strongest and heavist bone is in your body, and is located in the upper ear cavity, and it often is the cause of a loud clicking sound when you twist the upper bone in your ear.
No, I believe breaking a femur would be much worse pain than merely cracking it. But yes, it does hurt.
The Femur is the strongest bone in the body.
It depends on the bone. The femur (thigh bone) is much stringer than other bones.
Depends on the bone. Heavy bones like the femur are extremely resistant to breaking, as is the skull. Smaller bones tend to be jointed in a way that lets them flex away from breaking forces. To actually put a number to this belongs more in the realm of the clinical laboratory, as the answer is always going to be somewhat abstract. I can take a section of femur (in the lab), deliver measured vertical force until it fractures, and all I've discovered is what would happen to someone who was attentive enough to fall in an exact vertical plane, and remain in that position as impact settled in. Not real-world at all. That said, some bones bear internal pressures of up to a ton or more. Spines bear a huge amount of shearing stress and concentrated/angualr weight.