Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
If you weigh 160 pounds and you’re 5 foot 6 inches (66 inches), that would be 160 / 66² x 703, which equals 25.8. ... Body fat and BMI are both important indicators of health, but they’re not ...
Once development was complete on the furnace, the final working prototype of the waterside hay hot water pellet furnace was 45 inches tall and around a foot in diameter. It can burn 50 – 125 pounds of pellets per day and releases 30,000 – 190,000 BTUs (British thermal units) per hour.
At 6 feet 3 inches (1.91 m) and 215 pounds (98 kg), Jacobson was bigger than Babe Ruth. In July 1920, John B. Sheridan wrote in The Sporting News that Jacobson would be a better hitter than Ruth but for his unusual batting stance:
The National Institute of Standards and Technology formerly contended that customary area units are defined in terms of the square survey foot, not the square international foot, [17] but from 2023 it states that "although historically defined using the U.S. survey foot, the statute mile can be defined using either definition of the foot, as is ...
[23] [24] Josh Bordner, a senior wide receiver measuring 6 feet 4 inches (193 cm) and weighing 230 pounds (100 kg), led the team in receiving with 26 catches for 342 yards and three touchdowns. [ 23 ] [ 25 ] Dan Crimmins – also unusually large for a receiver (6 feet 5 inches (1.96 m), 237 pounds (108 kg)) – was the only other player with ...
J. D. Tippit [a] (September 18, 1924 – November 22, 1963) was an American World War II U.S. Army veteran and Bronze Star recipient, who was a police officer with the Dallas Police Department for 11 years. [4]
The core itself measures 13 feet (4.0 m) across and extends 54 feet (16 m) into the ground. [ 37 ] [ 143 ] [ 166 ] The bottom of the core is stabilized by a circular slab measuring 60 feet (18 m) across; it ranges in thickness from 10 to 48 inches (250 to 1,220 mm), with the outermost portions of the slab being thinner. [ 246 ]
The 12-inch coast defense mortar was a weapon of 12-inch (305 mm) caliber emplaced during the 1890s and early 20th century to defend US harbors from seaborne attack. [note 1] In 1886, when the Endicott Board set forth its initial plan for upgrading the coast defenses of the United States, it relied primarily on mortars, not guns, to defend American harbors.