Please explain why it would.
When you stand on one foot on a scale, the scale will only measure the weight that is being applied through that one foot. This means that the weight measured on the scale will be slightly less than when standing on both feet, but the difference is typically not significant for most people.
Your weight stays the same when you stand on one foot on the scale. The scale measures the force you exert on it due to gravity, so your weight will remain constant regardless of how you distribute your weight on the scale.
When standing on one foot, your weight is concentrated on a smaller surface area, leading to an increase in pressure on that one foot. This increased pressure helps to stabilize your body and maintain balance while standing on one foot.
When you stand with only one foot on a weighing scale, the scale reading will show half of your total body weight.
Force....pressure=force/area, so if you transferred to one foot on the scale it would read half your weight, but that is not the case because it reads force so on one foot the reading is the same
When you stand on one foot on a scale, the scale will only measure the weight that is being applied through that one foot. This means that the weight measured on the scale will be slightly less than when standing on both feet, but the difference is typically not significant for most people.
Your weight stays the same when you stand on one foot on the scale. The scale measures the force you exert on it due to gravity, so your weight will remain constant regardless of how you distribute your weight on the scale.
imagine standing on a scale, your left foot would be front axle gross weight and your right foot would be rear axle gross weight. and the total weight is GVWR gross vehicle weight rating
sometimes it will do either. If you are leaning then yes it will increase, but if you stand still it will decrease!
No
280N. Your position or state of contortion doesn't change your weight.
no you can not. There would be no way to tell how much weight was being read on both scales. You have to go out and buy a scale that has a higher weight allowance.
When standing on one foot, your weight is concentrated on a smaller surface area, leading to an increase in pressure on that one foot. This increased pressure helps to stabilize your body and maintain balance while standing on one foot.
When you stand with only one foot on a weighing scale, the scale reading will show half of your total body weight.
The main distinction between rigid and flexible flat feet is that the former have an arch visible when the foot is not bearing weight (such as when sitting or standing on tiptoes) but collapse when standing, whereas the latter have no arch at all, regardless of whether weight is being placed on the foot.
You should try using crutches or a cane to take some of the weight off your lower body. If you shift your weight to the other foot, you may cause a compensation injury.
Force....pressure=force/area, so if you transferred to one foot on the scale it would read half your weight, but that is not the case because it reads force so on one foot the reading is the same