Kingsford charcoal briquettes typically weigh about 30 to 35 pounds per cubic foot. However, the exact weight can vary slightly depending on the specific formulation and moisture content of the briquettes. It's important to check the packaging for precise information.
I'm not sure if this is right, but I believe it is 5,889,904.091136 g/ft3.
The conversion is impossible.You need to know the density of your charcoal.
It depends of the volume of the container. When the container is the atmosphere there's no practical amount. In a confined volume of a single cubic meters at standard pressure a handfull of briquettes 2-3 I would think should suffice. Grade intermediate volumes accordingly.
Pounds are a measurement of wieght, and Cubic Meters are a measurement of area. Therefore Pounds and Cubic Meters cannot be related in this manner. i.e. Pounds cannot be converted to Cubic Meters
0.116 pounds per cubic inch
The density of aluminum is approximately 0.098 pounds per cubic inch. To convert this to pounds per cubic foot, you would first convert cubic inches to cubic feet (1 cubic foot = 1728 cubic inches) and then multiply by the density in pounds per cubic inch. Therefore, the density of aluminum in pounds per cubic foot is approximately 169 pounds per cubic foot.
A measurement of 179 cubic inches has no direct equivalent in pounds. Cubic inches measure volume while pounds measure weight.
14,300 pounds. Sand has a density of 100 pounds per cubic foot.
There are approximately 4,860 pounds of salt in 2 cubic yards.
Ice weighs 57.4 pounds per cubic foot. 1 cubic yard then weighs 27 * 57.4 = 1,549.8 lb.
A measurement of 179 cubic inches has no direct equivalent in pounds. Cubic inches measure volume while pounds measure weight.
To convert ounces per cubic inch to pounds per cubic foot, you can use the following conversion factors: 1 pound = 16 ounces 1 cubic foot = 1728 cubic inches First, convert ounces to pounds by dividing by 16. Then, convert cubic inches to cubic feet by dividing by 1728. Multiply the two conversion factors to get the final result in pounds per cubic foot.