Quote:
Originally Posted by aznlvr11
Fill a big container to the brim with a known amount of water. Dip those babies all the way in, take them out, and then measure how much water is left. Subtract the amount of water left from the original amount to get the amount of water spilled. Calculate the weight of the water spilled and that should give you a reasonably close weight. You could also just weigh the full container of water and then again with the water is left. Subtract, blah, blah, blah....
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as should be expected, the asian has the best answer to this question. Although not nearly as exciting and entertaining as floppin' out dem titties on the vegetable scale at your nearest friendly neighborhood Kroger's grocery.
Since a lady's lovely mammaries are mostly comprised of body fat which is less dense than water, they are technically floating when placed in the water filled container. If you measure the weight of the water that was displaced, you would also have a fairly accurate weight of your marvelous bosom. The observation of the relationship of weight and buoyancy was first attributed to Archimedes when he was trying to determine the density of an irregularly shaped object, a golden crown made for King Hiero II of Syracuse that turned out to be a mixture of gold and another metal.