If the goal is to make a point, you have insufficient info.  If the goal is a 
servicable estimate, I think it is possible to proceed.
 
The intrinsic density (no air space) has to be close to 1 g/cm³ as it is mostly 
water. (You can test whether slightly more or less than one by throwing in a 
glass of water)
 
It is a spheroid, not a true sphere.  However, close packed spheres occupy 74% 
of the volume, random packed spheres around 64%.  The bulk density (includes 
air space) of many practical powders and particulates fall in the range of 60 - 
67% of intrinsic density.  Taking 64%, a dry pint of tomatoes is about 350 g.
 
Compare on that basis, and any error in which to buy will be too small to 
matter.

--- On Thu, 11/19/09, Pierre Abbat <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Pierre Abbat <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:46184] Re: Trader Joe's tomatoes
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 12:18 AM



On Saturday 07 November 2009 20:21:30 Michael Payne wrote:
> I think if they are prepacked, and not weighed at point of sale, they have
> to list both customary and metric units.

True, but I still don't know how to compare 551 ml of tomatoes, including 
interstices, with 454 g of tomatoes.

I went back there and there's still no indication of the weight of the dry 
pint of tomatoes.

Pierre

-- 
lo ponse be lo mruli po'o cu ga'ezga roda lo ka dinko

Reply via email to