Hey guys! So I decided to update with how I conducted my tiddy science, in case anyone else wants to do it!
I started by selecting a bowl that was large enough for my entire breast to fit into, comfortably. I weighed it on a food scale, and found that it was 195 grams. I then tared the scale, and began filling it with water. My scale tops out around 1750 g, so I wanted to be cautious and only filled it to 1430 g. This was just over half, and put it outside (this gets messy!). I tared the scale again, used an empty pitcher (272 g), tared, and added more water, this time 1380 g. I poured the water in, and miraculously it went just to the brim of the bowl--this was my goal.
So, at this point, I have a bowl on a flat service, filled to the brim with 2810 g of water. Now, I'm ready to test the volume of my boob. I chose to do the larger of the two, my right. I leaned over the bowl, and carefully began lowering my breast into the water, causing overflow. I continued until the rim of the bowl met my breastbone and my ribcage, just under the root of my breast. At this point, water has gone everywhere 😂😂😂 but I did have a bit left in the bowl. I returned to the scale and found that the remaining water and bowl weighed 593 g. Accounting for 195 g of the bowl, only 398 g of water remained. 2810 - 398 = 2412 g.
Now, we know that the density of water is 1, so 1 mL is 1 g is 1 CC, which means the volume of my right breast is 2412 CC!
I was a little bummed about it yesterday, because on the chart I found, it placed me at only an HH cup, but when I went hunting for implant comparisons, I found the XL Implants of South FL and compared...made me a bit happier, since I am between the two largest photos on the site. Of course, mine aren't that perky...but I can always work on that.