How Much Force is needed to break bones?
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How Much Force is needed to break bones?
Well? (Could you please display the numbers in pounds and Newtons if possible?)
It's just something I've always wondered.
It's just something I've always wondered.
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How about where their is padding? like say, the limbs or the rib bones.The Yosemite Bear wrote:About 9psi applied direct to the bone or at a location where there isn't any "Padding" to cushion the force (Like say fingers) or a nice strong 9psi overpresser will do to eardrums.
Does thickness of the bone affect this number? (IE how much bone their is)
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As with any material, shape and structure are important too, a bird has bones with very hollow structures since they need to be light but also have a honeycomb inside to allow for strenth, they would still be easier to break than a human bone.Majin Gojira wrote:How about where their is padding? like say, the limbs or the rib bones.The Yosemite Bear wrote:About 9psi applied direct to the bone or at a location where there isn't any "Padding" to cushion the force (Like say fingers) or a nice strong 9psi overpresser will do to eardrums.
Does thickness of the bone affect this number? (IE how much bone their is)
A vertebrae is a smaller and more compact bone than a femur and would take more force to chip or shatter than the femur due to the shape.
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AV, I am fairly sure in this context he means a fully healthy adult human.
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Well I was rather hoping the idea of tapping someone who suffered fourth degree osteogenesis imperfecta and thereby snapping their bones would be a clear indication to be careful an drink milk.NecronLord wrote:AV, I am fairly sure in this context he means a fully healthy adult human.
Incidentally, I hear that too much calcium is equally bad (not just because of gall stones) because it can make the bones too brittle with excess calcium.
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Ah indeed. The joys of freakish ingestion habits.Admiral Valdemar wrote:Well I was rather hoping the idea of tapping someone who suffered fourth degree osteogenesis imperfecta and thereby snapping their bones would be a clear indication to be careful an drink milk.NecronLord wrote:AV, I am fairly sure in this context he means a fully healthy adult human.
Incidentally, I hear that too much calcium is equally bad (not just because of gall stones) because it can make the bones too brittle with excess calcium.
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What about the bone mass of Darkstar's skull? How much force would it take to break that?
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According to my calculations, the answer is zero, because DarkStar is merely a spiritual personification of entropy. Therefor, he has no skull.
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As I know all too well...It's not that hard to break a femur if you hit it in the right place..Trust me, I broke mine in two places when my bike tipped over and the bar that's on all guy's bikes (inexplicably..) caught my leg and made a nasty cracking sound with it..So, not that much to break even the toughest bone in the body.The Yosemite Bear wrote:I was going for the minimum quanity
laterial stress.
you could use a femer as a jack, but a laterial stress, will still break one.
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what inexplicable bar? the top tube?
I think a vertebra would be easier to chip than a femur, bec of the finlike processes coming off of it. Not the body of it though. As a way to prolong my dorky post, I once was hit by a 1963 Olds while riding my bike, and the main injury was a broken medial femural condyle. Other damage was hella road rash and broken big toes.
I think a vertebra would be easier to chip than a femur, bec of the finlike processes coming off of it. Not the body of it though. As a way to prolong my dorky post, I once was hit by a 1963 Olds while riding my bike, and the main injury was a broken medial femural condyle. Other damage was hella road rash and broken big toes.
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Not breaking bones, but possibly useful in everyday knowlage.
Not breaking bones, but possibly useful in everyday knowlage.
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The one positioned right where a guy's gonna seriously hurt his Little Man if he slides off the front of the seat somehow..Malecoda wrote:what inexplicable bar? the top tube?
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I've had broken parts five times. I say broken parts because four of the times it was the cartilage in my nose separating from the bone. Rather painful the first two times, hurt a bit the third time, didn't even notice the fourth until blood ran into my mouth.Malecoda wrote:what inexplicable bar? the top tube?
I think a vertebra would be easier to chip than a femur, bec of the finlike processes coming off of it. Not the body of it though. As a way to prolong my dorky post, I once was hit by a 1963 Olds while riding my bike, and the main injury was a broken medial femural condyle. Other damage was hella road rash and broken big toes.
The other one was a broken fingerbone which occurred in band. I was a mallet player, and was playing two people on an instrument with crossovers (where parts overlap, so our arms crossed back and forth over each other). I was slow pulling back from a note, and my partner hit me with a yarn-wrapped rubber mallet on top of my hand, breaking my middle fingerbone in the middle of a performance. Let me just say I was in pain for a few days because I couldn't stop (I had a solo later that nobody else knew).
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