Japan uses kilograms right? Even 3 pounds is a lot but 3 kilos... damn...
Time for math 3 kilo in water is 3 litre ( 3000 gram) which is 3 squaredecimeter which is very near to equal to a cubic foot and fat is lighter than water. However breasts are predominantly fat which is about 0.9g/cm³ or 90gram/dm³ Which means her breasts would need to have approx 3.2 cubic foot of fat contents. ( 33 dm³ ) Volume = (4 Pi radius³) / 3 Therefore: Radius = [Volume(3/4)/(pi)]^(1/3) [33(3/4)/(pi)]^(1/3) = 1.98979549619 dm = 19.8 cm which is approx 7.8 inches in Radius.
Possible weight for breasts the size in the picture? Quite. ( of course breasts aren't made of the 'pure' fat used in this measurement and aren't only made out of fat. )
Was going to point that out. With my experience with carrying oil and meats, her breast should weight more than 3kg, though that's just my estimate.
I believe reading somewhere that breasts of the same volume can difference as much as 6% in weight but don't quote me on that. Breasts can also gain up to 25% in volume/size in aroused state this is of course swelling and doesn't have a great effect on their weight.
It's a feat of human anatomy, but breasts naturally have an angle between them, so huge boobs will grow outwards from the torso frame after growing to some size.
I feel like scientists have probably already done extensive studies on the anatomy and development of boobs at some point that covers this entire thread in detail.
It's a feat of human anatomy, but breasts naturally have an angle between them, so huge boobs will grow outwards from the torso frame after growing to some size.
I feel like scientists have probably already done extensive studies on the anatomy and development of boobs at some point that covers this entire thread in detail.
But for a breast having a 40cm of diameter is.... I dunno never seen one in RL, but must be harsh, I imagine a C or D Cup size of breast can be grasped within 1 palm (quick reference, 1 span of an adult's palm roughly 20 cm), so for a breast with 40cm diameter... thats out of sexy I think..
Thank god 2d exists so ships can be girls and carry weapons that weights a lot and dont need to care how big their fuel tanks are. Also shouldnt those be tonnes?
Thank god 2d exists so ships can be girls and carry weapons that weights a lot and dont need to care how big their fuel tanks are. Also shouldnt those be tonnes?
Then, according to Wikipedia, Takao had a displacement of 9,850 t at 192.5 m lenght.
I don't know how tall regular Takao is but, if we can get the mathematicians back in here, maybe they can calculate how much heavy cruiser Takao's breasts weigh.
Then, according to Wikipedia, Takao had a displacement of 9,850 t at 192.5 m lenght.
I don't know how tall regular Takao is but, if we can get the mathematicians back in here, maybe they can calculate how much heavy cruiser Takao's breasts weigh.
Displacement is the weight of the entire ship, not just the weight of a, um, single part (two parts?). Still, you could scale down the whole thing to a human scale and get a total weight for Takao, I guess.
1/100 scale would leave Takao at 192.5 cm, which is unusually tall for any human, much less a Japanese woman, but it's within the realm of possibility so we'll go with it for simplicity's sake. 1/100 scale means 1/1,000,000 mass, and 9,850 metric tons * 1/1000000 equals... 9.85 kg. So a 6'4" tall Takao would weigh about as much as a Scottie Dog.
Something's amiss, and that's that boat and human weights aren't really comparable. A boat's volume is mostly air, simply because it needs to float. Humans float, but only barely, with most of the body being under the water's surface. A boat needs to keep its entire deck well above the water, so they have to be incredibly lightweight relative to their volume.
However, multiply the 9.85 figure by 10, and you get 98.5 kg, or around 217 pounds, which is a lot more reasonable for someone of 6'4" stature. Scale down further to 160 cm (a "normal japanese woman" height), and weight is trimmed down to only 56.5 kg (~123 lbs). But that's for the whole person, not just breasts.