how many tons of rock are in a yard?
You will need just a bit less than 1 cubic yard. To be precise, you will need 0.86 cubic yards of rock. This would be about 23 cu ft. A cubic yard is 3 ft x 3 ft x 3 ft, and if you could be so precise in your placement, a cubic yard would theoretically cover 162 sq ft to a depth of 2 inches. In reality, you would more likely just cover the 140 sq ft to a slightly thicker depth (2 1/4"). Isn't that amazing?!?
Depends on how much higher and how the toilet is made. They are not all the same. A PVC flange is supposed to be above the floor level and will clear. They are about 1/4 inch thick. You can probably get away with up to 3/8 of an inch, but any more than that and the toilet will rock on the drain and eventually leak.
This depends on the density of the rock. Density is measured in terms of kilograms per meter cubed, so if you know the density, then you have your answer.
It depends on the size of the room. You need to measure the area to be covered and the area of the sheet rock
38ft*6ft*1.5inch = 38/3 yards*2yards*1.5/36yards = 1.055... cubic yards.
1,000 lbs or 454 Kilograms
Unless the rock is completely flat, there is no point in measuring the rock in yards.
A crack rock can be almost any size. Usually about half an inch in diameter.
There is no way of determining this. You can't give a weight and expect people to know how many pieces of half inch rock salt there are. You're an idiot for asking, you lose 4 internet points.
1 cubic yard of crushed rock fills 3/depth in feet square yards.
there is about 1.25 yards to a ton,so 22.5 tons would be approx 18 yards
The rock is 6 and a half foot
that's roughly a cubic yard of rock. . .ask the rock dealer what a yard of rock weighs most places will only deliver by half ton, ton. . .etc
You need to know the weight of 1 cub. yard of rock.
While dynamite comes in different sized sticks, the standard "inch and a quarter" cartridge weighs a half pound. It takes two of those to break a cubic yard of rock. So all you have to do is find how many cubic yards is the volume of the earth, and double that. By the way, all of the dynamite ever made is only a tiny fraction of the number.
It depends on what kind of rock it is.