I made a test: I put a piece of an old "rectified" Pyramid 0.70 nylon
string to water, and it sank, slowly but sank anyhow. So it is heavier
than water, and thus it must weight more than my 1000 Kg/m3.
But I have always calculated with 1000, and shall do so in the future,
too... ;-)
Arto
On 03/11/12 10:15, David van Ooijen wrote:
To add to the confusion, this is what I have:
Gut 1360 kg/m3
Nylon 1140 kg/m3
Carbon ca 1800 kg/m3
On 3 November 2012 08:38, Arto Wikla <wi...@cs.helsinki.fi> wrote:
Nylon 1000 Kg / m3
Carbon 1791 Kg / m3
Arto
On 03/11/12 09:01, Herbert Ward wrote:
Does anyone have numbers for the density of nylon
and the density of carbon?
Or, equivalently, a chart showing "diameter x in
nylon = diameter y in carbon"?
I used Google for several minutes, but did not find
anything.
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