Well , taking into account the average brick size : In the United States, modern bricks are usually about 8 × 4 × 2.25 inches (203 × 102 × 57 mm).
That gives us a volume of 1180242 cubic mm per brick. That translates into 1,180242 cubic dm , and 1 cubic metre contains 1000 dm .
That gives us an answer of 1000 / 1,180242 = 847,283... bricks in a cubic metre.
So , around 847. ( Assuming US bricks. )
So you get the volume of one brick. Measure the length, width and height of one brick. Convert each to metres (/100 is you measured in centimetres). Now divide a cubic metre by the volume of 1 brick to get how many bricks would make a completely filled in cubic metre. Keep in mind, this method does not count any cement needed to secure the bricks
That depends of the measures of the bricks
60 bricks per square metre
1.000 cubic metre = 1,000 litres0.860 cubic metre = 860 litres
The question does not make sense.One part of a one-cubic metre shape makes a cubic metre.Half of a two-cubic metre shape makes a cubic metre, and so on.
It depends on the size of the bricks.
500 bricks
Cubic metre is a unit for a volume, a decimetre is a unit for a length. The two cannot be compared. What you can say is that 1 cubic decimetre is 0.001 cubic metre.
One cubic metre = 0.001 megalitres.
There is 1 kilolitre in one cubic metre.
The answer will depend on the size of the bricks.
The answer depends on one cubic metre of what substance. A cubic metre of dry sand, for example, has a thermal energy of very nearly zero dekatherms.