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I weighed a cup of sand which equalled 12.45 ounces (used 12.5 ounces for computing purposes). So, 1 gallon of sand (16 cups) equals 200 ounces or divided by 16 ounces/pound, equals 12.5 pounds/gallon.
Dry Sand 1.44 to 1.6 Tons/ Cu.m
Sand, wet - 1920 kg/m³ Sand, wet, packed - 2080 kg/m³ Sand, dry - 1600 kg/m³ Sand, loose - 1440 kg/m³ Sand, rammed - 1680 kg/m³ Sand, water filled - 1920 kg/m³
because wet sand is cold from the cold water that makes it wet, and dry sand is in the sun and the water cant reach all the sand.
Sand, dirt, and other dry things weigh more if it is wet.
Approximately 3.6 cups to a pound of dry bowtie pasta.
Dry rice usually expands to 3 times its normal size. So, 1 pound of cooked rice divided by 3 equals 1/3 of a pound of dry rice needed.
8 ounces of anything is a half pound
16oz = 1lb therefore 20oz = 1lb 4oz
a dry "POUND" of sugar weighs a 2 pound 1/2 plus dryness
A one-pound package of dry beans equals about 2 cups dry, or 5-6 cups cooked.
not necessarily. Liquid ounces is a measure of volume, not mass. "dry weight" as youre referring to it means mass.
$2.48 a pound
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.
I think it should be 7/16 of a pound
Anyone who has dug a shovelful of wet sand and a shovelful of dry sand will tell you that the wet sand is quite a bit heavier than the dry sand. Dry sand is composed of individual particles with air in the spaces between grains. When you add water to a bucket of dry sand, the water replaces the air. Although the bucket is already full of sand, you can pour in quite a bit of water, adding that much more weight. If you have a choice of which bucket to carry, pick the bucket of dry sand every time!
That is 1 pound, 4 ounces.