According to Wikipedia, 34 pounds or 15.4221 kilograms. According to the Canada Grain Commission's Official Grain Grading Guide, No. 1 Canada Western Oats should weigh in at 56 kg per hectoliter, or 40.4 pounds per Winchester bushel.
1 bushel of oats is equal to 14.5kg
1.45lbs per bushel
$3.00/ bushel 1 bushel weighs 32lb.
A bushel is a unit of dry volume and is used as a unit of mass or weight. So a bushel of oats in the USA is equal to 14.51Kgs, in Canada 15.52Kgs. The name derives from the 14th Century, meaning a Box
2000 lbs
One bushel of oats weighs about 32 lbs. One pound would be 1/32nd of a bushel. That is about .0031 bushels per pound.
A bushel is a measure of volume, not weight. a bushel of gold weighs a lot more than a bushel of cotton. It does depend on the product. International agreement has determined ... for Rye, 56lbs per bushel for Barley 48lbs for Oats, 32lbs Yellow corn, 56lbs Soya Beans, 60lbs A bushel is considered to be 1.5 cubic feet, a size which can be translated into weight according to the product
A bushel is a measure of dry volume, that is the volume of a non-liquid substance. It is used particularly in relation to grain commodities (Oats, Barley, Wheat, etc). As the bushel is a specified volume and each grain has a certain density, the actual weight varies between the grains; however, the weight of a bushel of each grain has been standardised (and legislated) for use in the commodity markets, for example one bushel of: Barley - 48 lb, Wheat - 60 lb. But note, that different legislators can define different weights for the same commodity, eg in USA a bushel of Oats is 32 lb, but in Canada it is 34 lb.
It would depend on what type of grain. But it would probably be somewhere in the range of 7 to 10 lbs.
4.2c + 3.3o = 60 x 3.6; c + o = 60 so c = 60 - o 4.2 (60 - o) + 3.3o = 216 252 - 4.2o + 3.3o = 216 .9o = 36 oats = 40 bushels and corn = 20 bushels Check: (40 x 3.3 ) + (20 x 4.2) = 132 + 84 = 216; 216/60 = 3.60. QED
Too much of anything is bad for you, and oats are carbs, so yes.
A bushel is a measure of volume, not weight. It is used as a measure of the volume of dry commodities (like wheat), not liquids. So the weight of a bushel of something in kilograms depends on what that thing is. For example, a bushel of wheat weighs about 27kg but a bushel of barley only weighs 21kg and this varies depending of the moisture content.