Depends, my friend is about that size, and he's almost as strong as me, and I'm 6'2" 195 pounds, and I'm 14
There is no set amount that a person should be able to lift based on their body weight.
its depends on how much you weigh u should be able to do atleast 70 to 80 percent of your weight but sometimes after youv been liftin for a while u can do more like im 13 and i weigh 130 and i lift 155
To lift one pound using air pressure, you need approximately 1 psi. This is based on the principle that 1 psi can lift about 1 pound per square inch of surface area. Therefore, if you have a larger surface area, you would need proportionally less psi to lift the same weight. For example, a surface area of 2 square inches would require only 0.5 psi to lift 1 pound.
Instead of adding a 25 pound weight, and then 2 ten pound weights, it would be much easier to add a 45 pound weight. A 45 pound weight is standard in every gym, and not everyone can lift 10 more pounds if there was a fifty pound weight (five extra pounds on each side totals to 10 more pounds to lift).
Any force that is more than 50 pounds will lift a 50-pound object. The greater the force is, the greater the object's upward acceleration, and the sooner the object will reach any given height.
The lifting capacity of a magnet depends on its strength and the material it is attracting. Generally, a 2-pound magnet can lift objects weighing up to 2 pounds, but this may vary depending on the surface area and magnetic strength of the magnet.
250mg for a 90 pound child
they should be able to lift about 75 tons on there toung, and lift about half of America on there little finger
A 15-pound cat should be given approximately 68 milligrams of amoxicillin.
A rating plate will be on the forklift which should tell you the max lift weight, it will lift more but this is very dangerous
Not a single pound.
As much as they can take