one cubic meter is equivalent to 1000 cubic decimeters or 1000 liters. assuming the amount of mortar used has a volume of 2/3 of 1 brick (figuring on standard red brick of 2.5 x 5 x 10 inch bricks) per brick, then the amount of mortar used will be about 333 1/3 liters. if 1/3 of the volume of the mortar is water then the dry ingredients are equal to 222.222 liters. of that: 1/6 of the dry ingredients are portland cement if you are using a 3:2:1 (sand, lime, cement) or 37.04 liters.
1350 no of bricks with masonary in 100 cft.........
4.50/bag cement, required for 1 cubic metre of concrete ( M10).
7 bags cement
For 1 meter cube of brick work, you would need approximately 13 bags of cement.
To calculate the amount of sand and cement needed for 2000 bricks, you first need to determine the volume of one brick. Assuming a standard brick size of 8 inches by 4 inches by 2 inches, the volume of one brick is 64 cubic inches. For 2000 bricks, the total volume would be 128,000 cubic inches. To convert this volume to cubic feet (since sand and cement are typically measured in cubic feet), you would divide by 1728 (12x12x12). This gives you approximately 74.07 cubic feet of sand and cement needed for 2000 bricks.
1:6 brick work sand consumption for 1 cubic meter = 9.71 cft 1 cubic meter brick work cement consumption = 1.32 bags 1.32/28.8= .0458 cubic meter .458*6 = .275 .275*35.31 =9.71 cft
It depends on the type of structure according to the load subjected
not a lot. but assuming 9"x3" and using this brick calculator it works out at 0.0003 cubic meters of mortar or 0.91kg of sand and 0.25kg of cement per brick.
So you get the volume of one brick. Measure the length, width and height of one brick. Convert each to metres (/100 is you measured in centimetres). Now divide a cubic metre by the volume of 1 brick to get how many bricks would make a completely filled in cubic metre. Keep in mind, this method does not count any cement needed to secure the bricks
Considering the different applications and methods of concrete construction, you really can't calculate it that way.
0.3 cubic meter cement mortar consumes.
A 50 kg cement bag will hold about 1.3 cubic feet of dry cement powder.