There can be no equivalence.
A ton of sand represents the mass of a volume of sand. The volume is a 3-dimensional measure whereas a metre is a measure of length or distance in 1-dimensional space. According to basic rules of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from volume to length is fundamentally flawed.
one ton of sand covers about 100 square feet which is about 9.3 square meters.
1000
1 ton, but I don't know whether that's a short ton or a long ton. A cubic ton is a measurement of volume (i.e. how much space it takes up). A cubic ton of sand is how much space a ton of sand takes up. A cubic ton of timber is how much space a ton of timber takes up, and as timber is lighter than sand, a cubic ton of timber is larger than a cubic ton of sand, even though they both weigh the same. As for the volume of a cubic ton of sand, I have no idea. You could get a rough answer this way: "m" divided by "d" where m =one ton in whatever units you are using (e.g. kg) and d = density of sand (in the same units)
1000
about 4.8 ton of sand
one ton of sand covers about 100 square feet which is about 9.3 square meters.
1000
It will depend on type of sand ie fine,medium,coarse one cu mt per ton of sand will range between 1.4 ton to 2 ton
1 ton, but I don't know whether that's a short ton or a long ton. A cubic ton is a measurement of volume (i.e. how much space it takes up). A cubic ton of sand is how much space a ton of sand takes up. A cubic ton of timber is how much space a ton of timber takes up, and as timber is lighter than sand, a cubic ton of timber is larger than a cubic ton of sand, even though they both weigh the same. As for the volume of a cubic ton of sand, I have no idea. You could get a rough answer this way: "m" divided by "d" where m =one ton in whatever units you are using (e.g. kg) and d = density of sand (in the same units)
2000 pounds
1000
about 4.8 ton of sand
depends of the mass of what u are measuring
The price will depend on the quality of the sand and also on where you are trying to buy it.
4.12g/cm cubed
Masonry sand is estimated to weigh approximately 160 pounds per cubic foot. Therefore, it would take 12.5 cubic feet of masonry sand to equal one ton.
About 3/4 of a ton.