Doesn't matter what the whole depth is. You mean three feet above ground? Doesn't matter how thick the wall is either. Depends on how it is constructed. Why use bricks anyway? You are still going to have to line it. Look at some books on pond construction.
The half brick wall is used as a partition wall and it is a non load bearing walls.The one brick wall is a load bearing wallOne brick wall transfer loads from beams, slabs to the grade beam.
yes
Yes it is, but I'd suggest putting half a brick in instead of a whole one, because it might overflow.
If the depth is 4 feet throughout the whole pool, the total volume will be about 8,976 gallons of water.
In Canada :)
Each brick = 1kg + half a brick Therefore half a brick = 1kg, as two halves are required to make a whole. So 1 brick = 2kg :D
Think about it logically. A brick balances with 3/4 of a brick plus 1/4 of a brick, so 3/4 lb. must be 1/4 of a brick. Thus, a brick must weigh 3 lbs.
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No, the force of the water on the piers increases with depth below the surface due to the increasing pressure from the weight of water above. This is described by Pascal's law, which states that pressure in a fluid increases with depth.
Oh, isn't that a lovely thought? Well, you see, it would take quite a lot of feathers to equal the weight of a brick. Feathers are very light and fluffy, while a brick is quite heavy and solid. So, you'd need a whole bunch of feathers, maybe even a whole pillow's worth, to match the weight of just one brick.
There is no such whole word. It is actually twoseparatewords, in depth.
If a brick weighs 1 lb, then half a brick would weigh 0.5 lb. Therefore, 1 and a half bricks would weigh 1 lb (for the full brick) + 0.5 lb (for the half brick) + 1 lb (for the additional brick) = 2.5 lbs.