Crushed ice typically has a water content of about 90% to 95% when melted. Therefore, from 32 ounces of crushed ice, you can expect to get roughly 28 to 30 ounces of water after it melts. The exact amount can vary slightly based on the specific density and air content of the ice.
8 ounces
Yes, crushed ice will melt faster in a cup of water than in a cup by itself. This is because the water is a higher temperature than the ice.
There is 8 ounces of water.
Virtually all manufacturers offer a crushed ice option on some models.
10 ozs Water and ice are the same substance in a different phase state.
4 ounces of water will take up more space than 4 ounces of ice, as water is a liquid and ice is a solid. When water freezes into ice, it expands, increasing its volume.
When crushed ice is stirred with water in a bottle, the ice will start to melt due to the higher temperature of the water. This will cause the water level in the bottle to rise as the ice melts, increasing the volume of liquid in the bottle. The resulting mixture will be a colder solution than the initial water due to the ice melting, making the water colder.
Ten pounds (160 ounces) of ice melts into ten pounds (160 ounces) of water. The volume decreases when ice melts, but the weight does not change.
alot
no.. coz its frozen water..
nothing its just like water
It depends how small it is crushed and how tightly it's packed. The smaller it's crushed and more tightly it's packed, the heavier it is as there is more ice and less space between the pieces of ice. In the most finely crushed and firmly packed volumes of the frozen stuff, the cubic foot of crushed ice will approach being a solid block. A cubic foot of water weighs about 62.4 pounds. A solid block of ice of the same volume weighs about 57.5 pounds. A cubic foot of "normal" crushed ice might weigh 35 to 45 pound range. And it could weigh more or less.