Moderator: Community Team

riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
I know lots of people, and I use Facebook to keep up with some. We cannot keep up with all those we know, so cherish your Family and those Friends who are really special. And if I encounter someone I know, I try to spend Quality Time (as brief as it may be) with them to "catch up" and re-connect.Dukasaur wrote:Yeah, more and more people I used to know are dead. Still a minority at this point, but getting larger.
And, yeah, some that I kept planning to visit, and never got around to.

A kilogram is defined as a litre of water. A cubic metre is 1000 litres, so 1000 kilograms, which as you say is very roughly 2200 pounds, or more closely 2250.jusplay4fun wrote:I am also calculating the weight of 1 cubic meter of water. (I computed the value AND confirmed it by using online resources a bit over 2,200 pounds, btw, if you want to know.)
Duk, so you mean 2205* and NOT 2250 pounds? I did the calculation already, before my previous post.Dukasaur wrote:A kilogram is defined as a litre of water. A cubic metre is 1000 litres, so 1000 kilograms, which as you say is very roughly 2200 pounds, or more closely 2250.jusplay4fun wrote:I am also calculating the weight of 1 cubic meter of water. (I computed the value AND confirmed it by using online resources a bit over 2,200 pounds, btw, if you want to know.)
That's what is sometimes called a "metric ton", or just "tonne" in some countries.
Sorry, not trying to be a smartass. Just a helpful aside...

Yeah, 2205 not 2250.jusplay4fun wrote:Duk, so you mean 2205* and NOT 2250 pounds? I did the calculation already, before my previous post.Dukasaur wrote:A kilogram is defined as a litre of water. A cubic metre is 1000 litres, so 1000 kilograms, which as you say is very roughly 2200 pounds, or more closely 2250.jusplay4fun wrote:I am also calculating the weight of 1 cubic meter of water. (I computed the value AND confirmed it by using online resources a bit over 2,200 pounds, btw, if you want to know.)
That's what is sometimes called a "metric ton", or just "tonne" in some countries.
Sorry, not trying to be a smartass. Just a helpful aside...
*2204.62 pounds, assuming g = 9.80 m/s^2
btw1: to keep this smartass thing going., let's do a deeper dive![]()
btw2: kilograms measures mass and pounds is actually a measure of FORCE, not mass. One slug of mass is about 32 pounds of weight
the slug is the base unit of mass in the foot-pound-second (FPS) gravitational system of the Imperial and U.S. customary units.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
I had it from a very good source that the death rate among Viet Nam vets was very high, compared to those from the Korean and WWII Wars. I think the rate of suicide is EVEN higher among recent vets who served in Iraq and Afghanistan. This is truly SAD and Tragic.DirtyDishSoap wrote:I lose about one or two a year. Mostly old military buds. It's kind of sad to think about when I'm not even 40 yet and feels like most of the guys i hung out with are dead. Thanks for making me depressed jones! Lol
