Definitely not. Age has nothing to do with it. In fact, he is quite underweight.
The world record black drum weighed 113 pounds, 1 ounce.
94lb = 42.64kg
1300
If you were a daily smoker, up to 6 months.
A 94 lb bag of cement consists of 94 lbs of cement. I mean, isn't it obvious? The cement is used to make sidewalks, etc. They dry and is some of what we walk on today. :)
None, since there can be no conversion.A cubit foot (=1.5 square feet) is a measure of area in 2-dimensional space whereas a pound is a measure of mass. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, any attempt at conversion from one to the other is fundamentally flawed.
First of all, is this some kind of new language? It's bad enough to have to learn all the construction lingo, could we have the answers in plain English? If your question is: how many parts of cement and gravel you mix to 4 parts of sand, the answer is easy . . . 2 parts cement, 6 parts aggregate, 4 parts sand.
one cubic meter of concrete equals 30 bags(approximately) The exact answer is 28.8 bags of 50kg cement bags. Typical Portland Cement has a density of 94 lbs/cubic foot, which translates to 1505 kg / cubic meter. So, divide 1505 kg by the weight of a "bag" of cement in kg. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Seems to be perhaps a little confusion here between concrete and cement. Cement is the powder we mix with aggregate to make concrete. Cement varies in density as much as 100%, i.e. it can double in density. From the above URL one 94lb bag is taken to be 1 cu ft for building purposes. 1 cu metre = 35.3146667 cu ft and therefore 1 cu meter of CEMENT is that many 94lb (42kg) bags. Hence the answer for how many Cement bags in 1 cu m = 35.3 94lb bags. It would make more sense if the query was directed towards finding how many bags of cement are required for 1 cu meter of CONCRETE. This depends, of course, on the chosen concrete mix. They vary widely. A most common mix is 1:2:3 - 1 part cement, 2 parts sand, three parts aggregate all by volume. In concrete making the dry ingredients shrink during the process as they compact together. It is found necessary to commence with 1.6 cu m of dry material to finish with 1 cu meter of concrete. 1.6 cu m = 56.5034 cu ft of which the cement portion should be 1/6 for a 1:2:3 mix. 56.5034/6 = 9.4172 cu ft and therefore 9.4172 1 cu ft, 94lb or 42kg bags are required or round about 20 of the usual household DIY worker's 20kg bags here in Australia. Hence the answer for how many bags of cement to make 1 cu m of (1:2:3) concrete is 20 20kg bags. These answers are not precise because of the nature of cement. Refer again to the Portland Cement Association website and their remarks on density.
depends... scratch coat, or brown coat? naw it veries with the type of mix your going for (stickie, wet,) and the application method (pump or hand applied) sand type and water content of that sand ooh i forgot overhead sofit or vertical wall??? well i cant really tell you cause i worked on a gun crew in the 90's we had a resivor and i would do two dumps.... so the answwer is two dumps of water to one bag of riverside plastic cement 37 shovels of corna sand... two dumps or dry enough to stick on the wall and wet enough not to run down it.... yea two dumps duane-scaffold man