|
Kilogram (force)
|
Metric tons (force)
|
Newton
|
Explanation
|
Inapplicable
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Tier 11. Too low to be properly calculated.
|
Below Average Human
|
0-50
|
0-0.05
|
0-490.5
|
-
|
Average Human
|
50-80
|
0.05-0.08
|
490.5-784.8
|
The weight of an adult human, or a large dog.
|
Above Average Human
|
80-120
|
0.08-0.12
|
784.8-1177.2
|
The weight of a washing machine, or a tumble dryer.
|
Athletic Human
|
120-227
|
0.12-0.227
|
1177.2-2226.87
|
The weight of a mature lion.
|
Peak Human
|
227-545.2
|
0.227-0.5452
|
2226.87-5348.412
|
Olympic weight-lifters, professional strongmen, and powerlifters.
|
Superhuman
|
?
|
?
|
?
|
Any level clearly above peak human that does not have an exact value. Effort should be made to calculate the true value based on feats, but until then this is a placeholder.
|
Class 1
|
545.2-1000
|
0.5452-1
|
5348.412-9810
|
The world record for deadlifting feats in real life.
|
Class 5
|
1000-5000
|
1-5
|
9810-49050
|
Capable of lifting most cars, SUVs, vans, pickup trucks and trucks within the light-duty to medium-duty weight range, etc.
|
Class 10
|
5000-10^4
|
5-10
|
49050-98100
|
The weight of an adult elephant.
|
Class 25
|
10^4-2.5x10^4
|
10-25
|
98100-245250
|
The weight of Big Ben (the bell), a truck, a large motorboat.
|
Class 50
|
2.5x10^4-5x10^4
|
25-50
|
245250-490500
|
The weight of a semi-trailer truck
|
Class 100
|
5x10^4-10^5
|
50-100
|
490500-981000
|
The weight of a tank
|
Class K
|
10^5-10^6
|
100-1000
|
981000-9810000
|
The weight of the largest animal: blue whale, the heaviest of air-crafts.
|
Class M
|
10^6-10^9
|
1000-10^6
|
9810000-9.81x10^9
|
The weight of the largest ship
|
Class G
|
10^9-10^12
|
10^6-10^9
|
9.81x10^9-9.81x10^12
|
The weight of the human world population, the largest man-made structures.
|
Class T
|
10^12-10^15
|
10^9-10^12
|
9.81x10^12-9.81x10^15
|
The weight of the heaviest mountains.
|
Class P
|
10^15-10^18
|
10^12-10^15
|
9.81x10^15-9.81x10^18
|
The weight of small moons or small asteroids.
|
Class E
|
10^18-10^21
|
10^15-10^18
|
9.81x10^18-9.81x10^21
|
The weight of the atmosphere of the Earth.
|
Class Z
|
10^21-10^24
|
10^18-10^21
|
9.81x10^21-9.81x10^24
|
The weight of large moons or small planets.
|
Class Y
|
10^24-10^27
|
10^21-10^24
|
9.81x10^24-9.81x10^27
|
The weight of larger planets.
|
Pre-Stellar
|
10^27-2x10^29
|
10^24-2x10^26
|
9.81x10^27-1.962x10^30
|
The weight a solid object can reach before the gravitational collapse to a small star.
|
Stellar
|
2x10^29-6.3x10^32
|
2x10^26-6.3x10^29
|
1.962x10^30-6.1803x10^33
|
The weight of a smaller star up to the most massive star
|
Multi-Stellar
|
6.3x10^32-1.6x10^42
|
6.3x10^29-1.6x10^39
|
6.1803x10^33-1.569x10^43
|
The weight of the most massive star to the mass of the Milky Way.
|
Galactic
|
1.6x10^42-6x10^43
|
1.6x10^39-6x10^40
|
1.569x10^43-5.886x10^44
|
The weight of the Milky Way to the mass of the most massive galaxy.
|
Multi-Galactic
|
6x10^43-1.5x10^53
|
6x10^40-1.5x10^50
|
5.886x10^44-1.4715x10^54
|
The weight of the most massive galaxy up to the weight of the observable universe.
|
Universal
|
1.5x10^53+
|
1.5x10^50+
|
1.4715x10^54+
|
The weight of the observable universe up to any higher finite value.
|
Infinite
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Infinite strength by 3-dimensional standards.
|
Immeasurable
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Beyond 3-Dimensional concepts of mass: 4D hypermass lifting level and above. Meaning: Level High 2-A to High 1-B.
|
Irrelevant
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Lifting strength beyond the concept of dimensionality, in other words, strength capable of lifting Outerversal objects or above.
|