A pound of eared corn is equal to about 56 pounds. A bushel is also equal to 1.244 cubic feet.
US standards are 70 pounds per bushel.
There is no absolute answer to this, since the ears of corn can vary so much in size, shape, and weight. However, the general rule of thumb is to multiply the shelled corn weight by 0.8. Since a bushel of shelled corn should weigh 56 pounds, then a bushel of ear corn should weigh around 45 pounds. This, of course, refers only to field, or dent, corn, not sweet corn, popcorn, or any of the other types.
it weighs 56lbs for one bushel
8.50
Assuming the dry-milling method of ethanol production (the most common), one 56-pound bushel of corn makes 2.7 gallons of fuel ethanol and 17.4 pounds of dried distillers' grain. This means that 69% of the corn went into the ethanol.
Depends what area y'all living in I know in Ashland Kentucky y'all could sell from 99 cents to 2 dollars depending how how much the size color and stuff
100lbs
Seed corn has a bushel weight of 56 pounds. The price in 2014 is $3.30 per seed corn bushel. For sweet, fresh corn there are 70 pounds per bushel, with the bushel selling for about $15/bushel retail.
There are 9.3 quarts in a peck.
There is no absolute answer to this, since the ears of corn can vary so much in size, shape, and weight. However, the general rule of thumb is to multiply the shelled corn weight by 0.8. Since a bushel of shelled corn should weigh 56 pounds, then a bushel of ear corn should weigh around 45 pounds. This, of course, refers only to field, or dent, corn, not sweet corn, popcorn, or any of the other types.
56 lbs per bushel is the "standard" weight of commercial #2 corn
same as a bushel of salt
it weighs 56lbs for one bushel
48 pounds per bushel
Flax weighs 56 lbs for one bushel.
8.50
Up-to 500 grams .
the answer is the weight of an individual acorn multiplied by the number of acorns in a bushel.