You're viewing a single thread.
I'm almost afraid to ask... How much?
37 1 ReplyThe average Green Winged Macaw can generate around 400 PSI in one bite – that’s much stronger than the average human bite!
Moluccan Cockatoo: It’s bite force suprasses even that of the Macaw, weighing in at over 500 PSI.
https://www.parrotwebsite.com/which-parrot-has-the-worst-bite/
86 1 ReplyBecause my brain is fundamentally incompatible with imperial measurements:
500psi is equivalent to about 35kg of weight stacked into a centimetre square (so 35bar / 3500kpa)
33 0 ReplyBothered by the units but not the lack of factoring for size differences? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bite_force_quotient
It would seem the unit you want for the SI biting force quotient is the Newton per kilogram.
15 1 ReplyI don't think it matters how big the thing biting you is, just how likely it is to rip bits off.
A weasel has nearly 4 times the Bite Force Quotient of a Moon Bear, but I'd take many Weasel bites before a single Moon Bear bite.
5 0 ReplyIt's not so much the force that is important, regardless of if it's normalized for body size, it's the pressure that does damage. psi (or Pa in SI) is the appropriate unit.
2 0 Reply
Certainly a big number
11 0 ReplyAs far as numbers go, it's definitely a number.
8 0 ReplyI thought it had to be either a big number, or a small number. So, yeah.
4 0 Reply
How much is a human bite?
3 0 Reply162 psi. More than a cat, less than a big dog.
4 1 Reply
They crack nuts with their beaks, we had to invent a tool for that job.
12 0 Reply