Standard is 6 ounces, but it can anywhere from 5.5 to 6 ounces.
The weight of a hockey puck changes the shot a lot. A lighter puck can not be hit as hard and their more of a posibility of the trajectory being off. A heavier puck will be too heavy to be shot at high speeds, therefore the shot wouldn't be quite as hard.
Sliding friction is shown in hockey when you hit the puck. The puck has friction against the ice (but there isn't much).
If a puck is placed on the ice so that it isn't moving it will stay where it is placed. That's inertia.If a player whacks the puck straight for the net and no other player gets in the way then the puck will go into the net. The only thing that could slow the puck would be the tiny friction between the ice and the puck but that doesn't amount to much. The air turbulence around a puck must have a slight effect too. But the overall straight line trajectory of the puck is inertia too.In ordinary life, things 'at rest stay at rest' and things that are moving move in straight lines unless additional forces act on those things.
hockey puck of mass m = 0.25 kg
On the ice, a hockey puck is pushing against much less surface friction, so it will slide with relative ease. On the street, a puck is forced to push against the pavement which it cannot do very well causing it to either stop or bounce across the surface.
0.80-0.85 kg
The weight of a hockey puck changes the shot a lot. A lighter puck can not be hit as hard and their more of a posibility of the trajectory being off. A heavier puck will be too heavy to be shot at high speeds, therefore the shot wouldn't be quite as hard.
a puck
A hockey puck
THE PUCK, you play hockey to get the puck.
A standard ice hockey puck weighs between five and one half (5.5) and six (6) ounces.(156-170 g).
The hockey puck was invented so hockey players had something to shoot into the goal.
A puck stopper is another name for a goaltender in hockey.
The Game of Ice hockey is played with a Puck.
A Kyle Okpososinged hockey puck is worth 500$
The surface area also depends on the thickness of the puck.
The average lifespan of an NHL hockey puck is 7 minutes.