No. Grains per pound is the measurement of weight not volume. The volume would be different but the weight would be the same.
The troy ounce (ozt) is 480 grains. There are 12troy ounces per troy pound.
It is 79.832 kg (approx.). Kilogram is an SI unit of mass and pound is an imperial unit of mass. To convert from pound to kg, multiply the pound unit by 0.453592.
In Germany the word "Pfund" is taken for half a kilogram or 500 grams. 500 grams are: 17.63698 ounces (oz) 1.10231 ponds (lb) 0.0393676 quarters (qu) 7716.21477 grains
Imagine a 500 pound glob of clay. If I took out .0000001 pounds of clay out of it, that would be an insignificant change in mass. Basically, if you take something out of something else and you hardly noticed it, that is an insignificant change.
Density= Mass/VolumeIf we insert arbitrary figures ...Block 1 Volume 40 cubic cms [arbitrary]Block 1 Mass is less than Block 2 so 39 gmsBlock 2 Volume is less than Block 1 so 39 cubic cmsBlock 2 Mass 40 gms [arbitrary]D1 = 39/40 = 0.975 grams/cubic cmD2 = 40/39 = 1.0256 grams/cubic cmIt's clear therefore than inserting extra matter [mass] into the same volume or a lesser volume results in a higher density.The same holds true where mass remains constant and volume is altered. Greater volume = Less Density and vice versa.
There are 7,000 grains in one pound of gun powder. Grains are measured at 437.5 grains per ounce.
7000 grains of powder, lead, or peanut butter to one pound.
1 pound = 7 000 grain
7,000 grains in one pound
Grain is a unit of weight. There are 7000 grains in a pound. The number of grains loaded intoeach cartridge will vary, dpending on the cartidge, and on the powder used. IF it were 7 grains per catridge, you could reload 1000 cartridges. Divide 7000 by the weight of powder for each cartridge.
One pound : 7,000 grains
One pound = 7,000 grains.
Assuming normal Earth gravity, one pound of any substance will be approximately 454 grams.
With ammunition, the term GRAIN is a measure of weight- there are 7000 grains to a US pound. It does not refer to the number of individual flakes of powder (grains). Load data will vary depending on the weight of shot to be fired, and how hard you want that to shoot- and it also varies depending on which of several powders you use. For example, a 1 oz shot load might use from 20-25 grains of powder X, 22-27 grains of powder Y- and a 1 1/8th oz shot load might use 18-14 grains of X, etc.
Standard .177 cal BB is 5.28 grains. 7000 grains to a pound so 1,325.76 BB's to make a pound.
0.001 pound water (16 ounce/1 pound)(437.5 grains/1 ounce) = 7 grains ---------------
1 pound equates to about 7,000gr