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Depending on the use of the concrete, between 5-6 bags.
Refer to the definition of density: density = mass / volume. Also, each substance has its characteristic density, independent of its size. A pound of cement will have the same density as a ton of cement. And cement is more dense than rice, regardless of how big a chunk of each you take.
One cubic meter of concrete is equal to 1.308 cubic yards of concrete. If there are 5 1/2 bags of cement in 1 cubic yard of concrete, there would be 7.2 bags in 1 cubic meter of concrete. These are the 94 pound bags of portland cement or roughly 40kg bags so figure 8 bags total. Some will be left over
A British pound coin is 22.5 millimetres in diameter (0.89 inches) and is 3.15 millimetres thick (0.124 inches).
Approx. 4500 bees make a pound.
1 94-pound bag of cement is approximately equal to 1 cubic foot.
Cubic feet needed is the thickness is 4 inches:416Cubic yards:15.3660 pound bags92580 pound bags 694
Depending on the use of the concrete, between 5-6 bags.
It can be both, depending on packaging. By "cement" you're talking plain ol' Portland Cement for making concrete, correct? In bulk it's a commodity; in 94-pound bags it's a product.
Forty five 80 pound bags of cement are needed to make one cubic yard of concrete.
You would need 31, 80 pound bags to cover 1 cubic yard at 4 inches deep. If you would like the depth to be 6 inches, 45 bags would be needed.
The cement is more dence
From the Portland Cement Association:Bricklayer Joseph Aspdin of Leeds, England first made portland cement early in the 19th century by burning powdered limestone and clay in his kitchen stove. By this crude method he laid the foundation for an industry which annually processes literally mountains of limestone, clay, cement rock, and other materials into a powder so fine it will pass through a sieve capable of holding water. Cement is so fine that one pound of cement contains 150 billion grains.So, I think you could say that cement is a rock (limestone) derivative.
Doesn't work. Pounds is weight, millimeter is length. There is no conversion or translation avaliable between them. You might as well ask for inches in a pound.
3.90
Refer to the definition of density: density = mass / volume. Also, each substance has its characteristic density, independent of its size. A pound of cement will have the same density as a ton of cement. And cement is more dense than rice, regardless of how big a chunk of each you take.
6.50 for a 50 pound bag 12 cents a pound