about 1500 pounds
A cubic ounce is a measure of volume. A cubic ounce of gold weighs more than a cubic ounce of water. Unless the material which makes up the cubic ounce is specified, its weight cannot be determined.
The question cannot be answered because weight depends on the force of gravitatonal attraction which varies between locations. In outer space, for example, a cubic metre of mercury would weigh nothing. Even on the surface of the earth the force varies by up to 5%.
According to the related link, PHYSLINK.COM, "1 cubic foot of air at standard temperature and pressure assuming average composition weighs approximately 0.0807 lbs". The weight of air is highly dependant on the air temperature and barometric pressure.
Nothing. A weight is a force whereas a pound is a measure of mass. For example, a mass of 27 pounds would weight nothing in outer space (at the Lagrange points to be more precise), but would have a weight of millions of pound-weight near a black hole.
It would depend upon the materials that had been composted. The National Recycling Coalition Measurement Standards and Reporting Guidelines has estimated that one cubic yard of finished compost from yard waste would weigh 1,400 pounds.
The net weight of a 64qt bag of Miracle Gro Potting Mix is 20 pounds (9.1 kg)
Quart of potting soil = .875 pounds (roughly)...do the math.
The answer depends on the material whose weigh you require.
The weight varies; but if it's dry sand, the cubic meter will weigh around 1500 kilos.
what does one cubic yard of general trash weigh?
If the weight is 62.5, then it weighs 62.5
It all depends on what you have in the cubic feet. -- If the cubic feet are full of air, they weigh about 8 pounds. -- If they're full of water, they weight about 6,243 pounds (3.1 tons). -- If they're full of lead, they weigh about 70,793 pounds (35.4 tons). -- If the cubic feet are completely empty, they weigh exactly zero.
I don't know, but one way to find out is to weigh a cubic inch of jelly then multiply that weight by 1728 (123).
Quarts is a measure of volume; pounds is a measure of weight. This posits that there is no standard conversion. The rate of quarts per pound will actually be dependent upon the density of the soil. A denser soil will weigh more; and therefore convert to less quarts per pound. For those not comparison shopping, the best thing you can do is weigh a quart or two of the soil you use for its particular rate. - Be sure to measure the empty container first and subtract its weight from the weight of the filled container for the correct weight of the soil! *** Based on my search on potting soil, each quart weights approximately 0.875 pounds; thus, 10 pounds means roughly 11.43 quarts.
The weight of sand (or anything else) is not measured in cubic metres!The weight of sand (or anything else) is not measured in cubic metres!The weight of sand (or anything else) is not measured in cubic metres!The weight of sand (or anything else) is not measured in cubic metres!
It would depend on the contents of the cubic meter, 4 cubic meters of air would not have a measureable weight, and 4 cubes of sand/gravel would weigh considerably more.
The weight of 2.25 cubic feet of water is approx 4495 pounds-force (lbf).