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How do calculate weight of 50mm6mm copper strip per meter? - Answers

You convert everything to a common unit, for example meters, multiply length x width x height to get the volume, then multiply this volume by the density of copper, which you can easily look up. - Actually this will give you the mass, not the weight. If you really want the weight, you can multiply the mass by Earth's gravity - about 9.8. Alternately, you can weigh a sample.



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How do calculate weight of 50mm6mm copper strip per meter? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_calculate_weight_of_50mm6mm_copper_strip_per_meter

You convert everything to a common unit, for example meters, multiply length x width x height to get the volume, then multiply this volume by the density of copper, which you can easily look up. - Actually this will give you the mass, not the weight. If you really want the weight, you can multiply the mass by Earth's gravity - about 9.8. Alternately, you can weigh a sample.



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/How_do_calculate_weight_of_50mm6mm_copper_strip_per_meter

How do calculate weight of 50mm6mm copper strip per meter? - Answers

You convert everything to a common unit, for example meters, multiply length x width x height to get the volume, then multiply this volume by the density of copper, which you can easily look up. - Actually this will give you the mass, not the weight. If you really want the weight, you can multiply the mass by Earth's gravity - about 9.8. Alternately, you can weigh a sample.

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      You convert everything to a common unit, for example meters, multiply length x width x height to get the volume, then multiply this volume by the density of copper, which you can easily look up. - Actually this will give you the mass, not the weight. If you really want the weight, you can multiply the mass by Earth's gravity - about 9.8. Alternately, you can weigh a sample.
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