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    Using Euro coins as weights (2004)

    (www.rubinghscience.org)
    180 points Tomte | 19 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source | bottom
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    modulovalue ◴[] No.41895049[source]
    I'm using euro cents as weights in my weighted vest.

    When I started doing this I didn't want to afford dedicated weights as it seemed like a waste of money, but I had many cents saved up from my childhood, which I started to use instead.

    I have roughly 15kg in euro cents in my vest and I'm regularly talking walks with it.

    To get one kilo you need 435 cents and it turns out that in Germany you can also "buy" coins "for free" at the "Bundesbank", that is, you can exchange actual money for weights without any fees. You give 4 euros and 35 cents and you get a kilo. Once you need the money back, you can also sell those coins back to them for free.

    replies(7): >>41895065 #>>41895160 #>>41895217 #>>41895629 #>>41896292 #>>41896557 #>>41896823 #
    1. ffsm8 ◴[] No.41896292[source]
    You can also go to the beach and get unlimited amounts of weight for free too. That's what's most budget weights are made of
    replies(4): >>41896637 #>>41896878 #>>41897195 #>>41902003 #
    2. krick ◴[] No.41896637[source]
    I don't mean to argue that it's just gimmick and any sane person would just use sand, but to be completely fair, sand is much less dense than steel, so if the coins pack well it does make a better weight.

    I do also suspect that there must be some product that must be more cost effective than coins but denser than sand, but cannot think of it right away. I mean, scrap steel is a couple of cents per kg.

    replies(2): >>41897580 #>>41899704 #
    3. toast0 ◴[] No.41896878[source]
    It's a lot easier to contain coins vs sand, though.
    replies(2): >>41900336 #>>41902963 #
    4. omio ◴[] No.41897195[source]
    Just FYI this is illegal in many areas.
    replies(1): >>41900333 #
    5. Ao7bei3s ◴[] No.41897580[source]
    Olympic weight plates for barbells. They're widely used, so competition has brought the cost down, and they're easily available in useful increments. I currently see 4x 10lbs for <$50 on Amazon. That works out to 2,53 Euro per kg. So cheaper than euro cents. They may not have the exact shape you need.

    The scrap steel probably didn't cost cents per kg when it was sold for its original purpose. You are paying for a useful shape.

    A professional equivalent of weighted vests are ballistic plate carriers. Real ballistic plates can be fragile and expensive, so options for exercising in (or milsim games in airsoft etc.) include expired (and failed to re-certify) real ballistic plates, made for purpose training plates... or plate shaped sandbags!

    replies(3): >>41898267 #>>41898460 #>>41900876 #
    6. another-dave ◴[] No.41898267{3}[source]
    > That works out to 2,53 Euro per kg. So cheaper than euro cents.

    The cents are free though, cause they're legal tender — just deposit them instead of having to sell 2nd hand

    replies(1): >>41903084 #
    7. wging ◴[] No.41898460{3}[source]
    The cheapest plates can be higher variance than you might expect. I’ve seen reports of 45s that are 10% light.
    8. SturgeonsLaw ◴[] No.41899704[source]
    Sometimes sand + water is used for ballast. Depends on your use case, if your heavy thing is moving around then the sloshing won't be ideal, but if it's just sitting somewhere static then it can work.

    eg; weighing down the corners of a beach tent, pegs won't grip in the sand so instead tie plastic bags onto the guy ropes and fill them with sand and water.

    9. forgetfreeman ◴[] No.41900333[source]
    It's illegal to fill a bucket with sand?!
    replies(4): >>41900490 #>>41902050 #>>41902952 #>>41903626 #
    10. forgetfreeman ◴[] No.41900336[source]
    You can keep both in a series of ziploc bags for convenience.
    11. phinnaeus ◴[] No.41900490{3}[source]
    And remove it from the beach, yes.
    12. raverbashing ◴[] No.41900876{3}[source]
    Especially if you hit eBay or similar, you can get it for cheap
    13. watwut ◴[] No.41902003[source]
    For me, it would be rather long trip and generally too expensive. I would had to steal it from kids playground. Which is rather low thing to do.
    14. sofixa ◴[] No.41902050{3}[source]
    Sand is not an infinite resource. It's crucial for both protection (if you remove all the sand from the beach, there will be nothing to cushion the waves and currents and etc. and it will result in more erosion, which can be deadly for any constructions nearby) and construction.

    As such, it's completely normal that you can't just take sand or stones from many beaches. The very famous Étretat town in France with its accompanying beach and rocks, have a very strict "don't take souvenirs from the beach because you'd be actively destroying it" policy.

    replies(1): >>41902853 #
    15. Moru ◴[] No.41902853{4}[source]
    Sometimes someone has paid money to place the sand at the beach because it wasn't a sand beach from the start. So no, you can't go fill your sacks with sand anywhere you like, not even in Sweden were we can pick berries in the forest for free. Stones, trees and sand is not allowed without permission.
    16. OJFord ◴[] No.41902952{3}[source]
    No, to walk away from the beach still holding that full bucket.
    17. Aachen ◴[] No.41902963[source]
    Round coins are also less coarse and rough
    18. yurishimo ◴[] No.41903084{4}[source]
    Assuming you live in a sane country. One of the few complaints I have with Dutch society being so "streamlined". Cash is seen as a nusciance here.
    19. jajko ◴[] No.41903626{3}[source]
    You would be surprised how many things its illegal to take from beaches or country (sand, corals, some shells, of course anything old enough etc)