A Kilogram is a unit of measurement, no matter what you are measuring, the larger number will have more mass
Since kilograms are the unit we use to measure mass, the answer is no: both have 1kg. of mass. :D
Newtons and kilograms are incompatible units - Newtons is for force, kilograms is for mass. With normal Earth gravity, each kilogram weighs about 9.8 Newton; but in other places (for example, on the Moon, or Jupiter), the same kilogram can weight more, or less.
Mass. (Weight is also often expressed in grams or kilograms. This is wrong technically, and in our modern space-age, can lead one to a heap of trouble. For example: When asked the weight of one kilogram of mass, your friend might answer: "Naturally it weighs one kilogram. Duh!" He could get away with it for a while. But if that kilogram of mass were taken to the moon, then he would be faced with the uncomfortable and confusing realization that the same kilogram doesn't weigh a kilogram any more.)
Kilogram is a unit of mass, not of weight. In SI units, weight is measured in Newtons. See here for more details: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_versus_weight65 kilograms is approximately the mass of a typical adult person.
A kilogram is a unit of mass. A decimetre is a unit of length. The two units are therefore incompatible.
Grams. A kilogram is 1,000 grams and is roughly equivalent to 2.2 pounds
kilo 1 kilogram = 1000 grams 1 gram = 0.001 kilograms
180 kilograms is 60 times heavier than 3 kilograms.
kilogram 1 kilogram = 1000 grams 1 gram = 0.001 kilograms
10 kg is 10 kg, regardless of the substance.
Well, if you want a more measurement you would use kilograms because it is more size appropriate. For example, humans are mostly likely to be measured in kilograms and pounds. Using grams for humans would give you a gigantic number that you would not want to say every time you need it.
These two units have no direct relationship and can't be converted. They measure different 'dimensions', that is, different types of quantities. A teaspoon is a unit of volume. A teaspoon of lead contains more mass (and is heavier) than a teaspoon of water. A kilogram is a unit of mass. A kilogram of oxygen can fill many more teaspoons than a kilogram of iron.