The density of sand varies depending on what minerals the grains of sand are made of, and wet sand is denser than dry sand. As a rough rule of thumb, a litre of dry sand weighs about 1500 grams.
5lbs
There are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter. One milliliter is 0.001 liter
This question concerns the density (that is, the mass per unit-volume) of water vs sand. Pure water is a precise substance, the density of which is, by definition, 1000kg/m3, which means 1 litre (0.001m3) of water weighs 1000grams (1kg). Sand is a non-uniform material, that can exist at different densities depending on the type of sand, the compactness and whether or not the sand is wet. As a rough guide, the weight of a litre of sand under the following conditions is given: Sand, wet1922gSand, wet, packed 2082gSand, dry1602gSand, loose1442g From these quantities, we can see that in all cases, sand is heavier than water.
250 pi kilograms
Since a liter is1000 milliliters, 50 milliliters is 50/1000th of a liter or 1/20th of a liter or roughly 1/5th of a cup.
Liter is a measure of volume and pound is a measure of weight, so it depends on the density of that material.
A liter is a unit of volume not weight, therefore to determine how much a liter weighs it depends on what you're measuring. A liter of water has a different weight than a liter of sand and so on.
1 kg is still 1 kg no matter what the substance is. a kilogram weighs 2.2 lbs brewski
kg is a measure of weight; liter is a measure of volume
.8kg Save
3.96 pounds 1 litre of sand weighs 1.8kg so times that by 2.2= 3.96 and that is in pounds
assuming density is 1g/cm3, 1 liter should weigh 1 kilogram
There are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter. One milliliter is 0.001 liter.
1Litre = 0.711kg (at 60 deg F)
1 liter of distilled water have exactly 1kg of mass.
1 liter stupeh
1 yard of mix ready weight please
It depends on that specific bottle. There is no standard weight.