0.986 pounds (about 1 pound).[1]
Edit: I believe the correct answer is 101.18 feet of 12 gauge cooper wire weights 2 pounds. The American Wire Gauge (AWG) Table indicates 50.59 feet per pound.
The second answer is correct.
Depends on the thicknes of the wire.
About three pounds, according to this site:
http://www.rjleahy.com/Store/wire/cwi.htm
See second chart on left... 10 ga copper wire is about 33 feet per pound.
Just weighed a foot of 14 ga insulated copper wire:
8.4 grams, or 0.0185# per foot.
0.9862 pounds.
.28 pounds
Assuming you mean electrically, Copper is roughly 10 times less electrically-resistant than steel. That is probably the best measurement to gauge by for what you are asking.
True and False. If the coin is dated 1983 and newer, it is indeed 97.5% zinc and 2.5% copper. However, if it is dated 1981 and earlier, then it is 95% copper. During 1982, the US Government decided that pennies were too expensive to make with so much copper. So they decided to use zinc, with is strong and also cheaper. These newer pennies are only coated with copper. One can easily decide the content by its weight. The newer zinc pennies weigh only 2.50 grams, whereas the older copper-rich pennies weigh 3.11 grams.
On average there are between 50 and 120 mg of copper in the body. Too much copper is not good for you. If you are double jointed or you can do a back bend you have too much copper in your body. But if you take gymnastics or something like that then your fine but almost everyone has too much copper in their bodies. If you look on the back of the food package it says how much copper there is. 2% is okay but if there's 15% then that's too much.
100 g of anhydrous copper sulfate (CuSO4) contain 39,81 g copper.
he much does a liter of rice weigh in grams
7.395 lbs.
Copper pennies minted before 1982 weigh 3.11 grams.
30amps
A pound.
15 pounds.
8.9mt
8.89 grammes.
.40 grams
its 10000kg
depends on the grade and type of scrap copper. for example do you have insulated cable, stripped copper wire, buss bar, etc. No. 1 heavy scrap copper is around $3.00 per pound (lb)
It is impossible to give an answer. For instance, a metre of copper wire, or a metre of a copper ingot?
Depends on the thicknes of the wire. About three pounds, according to this site: http://www.rjleahy.com/Store/wire/cwi.htm See second chart on left... 10 ga copper wire is about 33 feet per pound.