Depends on the type off wood. The following list was taken from the site noted:
Name .........................Density in kg/m3
Afromosia .......................705
Apple ..............................660 - 830
Ash, black .......................540
Ash, white ......................670
Aspen .............................420
Balsa ..............................170
Bamboo ..........................300 - 400
Birch (British) ..................670
Cedar, red ......................380
Cypress ...........................510
Douglas Fir .....................530
Ebony ............................960 - 1120
Elm ( English ) ...............600
Elm ( Wych ) .................690
Elm ( Rock ) ..................815
Iroko 655 Larch ............590
Lignum Vitae .................1280 - 1370
Mahogany ( Honduras ) ..545
Mahogany ( African ) ......495 - 850
Maple 755 Oak ...............590 - 930
Pine ( Oregon ) ...............530
Pine ( Parana ) ...............560
Pine ( Canadian ) ............350 - 560
Pine ( Red ) ....................370 - 660
Redwood ( American ) ....450
Redwood ( European ) ....510
Spruce ( Canadian ) .......450
Spruce ( Sitka ) .............450
Sycamore .....................590
Teak .............................630 - 720
Willow ..........................420
There is no clear answer. It would depend on the density of the lumber. It would be more for Fir than for Ebony or Rosewood.
There are 1000 litres in 1 cubic metre.
A kilogram is a measure of mass. A cubic metre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. If you are not convinced, consider a cubic metre of air. How many kilograms? Next consider a cubic metre of lead. How many kilograms?
Depends on tonnes of what? At 1 tonne per cubic mtere you would have 12.5 cubic metres.
A ton is a measure of mass. A cubic metre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and,according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. If you are not convinced, consider a cubic metre of air. How many tons? Next consider a cubic metre of lead. How many tons?
1 cubic metre = 1000 litres.
A tonne is a measure of mass. A cubic metre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and,according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. If you are not convinced, consider a cubic metre of air. How many tonnes? Next consider a cubic metre of lead. How many tonnes?
The answer will depend on the metal. Lithium has a density of 0.53 tonnes per cubic metre while osmium has a density of 22.5 tonnes per cubic metre (more than 40 times as much).
0.74 tonnes=1cubic metre apparently to my research... you should try experimenting it!
1 cubic metre of dry concrete gravel weighs 2.4 tonnes Ernie Dibb Perth West Australia
There can be no equivalence. A tonne is a measure of mass. A cubic metre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid. If you are not convinced, consider a cubic metre of air. How many tonnes? Next consider a cubic metre of lead. How many tonnes? The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
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.
You need material density in tonnes per cubic metre Then: > multiply by: 1.000 to get metric tonnes 0.984 to get long tons 1.102 to get short tons > note: metric tonne = 1000 kilograms long ton = 2240 pounds short ton = 2000 pounds
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Using building sand density @ 110 pounds per cubic foot (1.762 tonne per cubic metre) > volume = mass / density volume = 1 / 1.762 = 0.5675 cubic metres > Note: if you have a different value for the sand density, replace 1.762 with your figure ( in tonnes per cubic metre) , and calculate.
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.