Hi there,
Okay I understand that it is 1 litre of volume. I am thinking of getting one litre of epoxy resin, In cm is this 10cm x 10cm x 10cm? I think it is but am after a second opinion.
Regards Ben
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Hi there,
Okay I understand that it is 1 litre of volume. I am thinking of getting one litre of epoxy resin, In cm is this 10cm x 10cm x 10cm? I think it is but am after a second opinion.
Regards Ben
Hi Ben,
You are spot on! 1L = 1000cc which fits into a 100mm cube!
1000 of them = 1 cubic metre which = 1000L
Oh. Dear.
Bob has put his hat on once again.
Pete :)
The most atmospheric pressure can effect the weight of 1L of water is about 0.1% (this is a buoyancy effect).
Changes in weight due to altitude because of a changes in "g" are about 0.3% at 30,000 ft
Changes in weight due to latitude (equator to poles) is also about 0.3%
Note I also changed my post to "mass". Then none of the above matter.
Good on you Bob!
All correct.
Thank you.
I must learn to be more concise.
I must learn to be more concise.
Sorry if I came over as a smart #### - just too used to correcting students.
Good work folks - love it. But I'm confused. I drive off the mountain from my home in the Dandenongs to buy my milk. As I bring it home I increase altitude and decrease temperature. Is my milk lighter or heavier when i get it home?
Excellent work Bob! I will enjoy explaining this to my kids next time we go shopping.
Do you buy milk or do you buy "lite" milk?
You should be careful. It would seem that some milks are getting "liter" if you believe the advertising. You may find that by the time you get home, depending on the time of year, your milk may have disappeared completely. A terrible thing!
I blame the physics. or was that the phsychics --- bugger!
Ah, but the question is should we exclude or correct for the effects of frame dragging and other relativistic mass effects in our milk purchase calculations?