Doesn't work. Pounds is weight, millimeter is length. There is no conversion or translation avaliable between them. You might as well ask for inches in a pound.
125 pounds of cement weighs 125 pounds.
65 LBS
1 cubic yd of a concrete mixture contains about 500 hundred lbs of cement
A 3-gallon bucket of cement typically weighs between 40 to 100 pounds, depending on the type of cement mix being used and its water content.
bolt 15 mm 65 lbs bolt 17 mm 75 lbs bolt 19 mm 85 lbs
The answer is, remarkably, 6. Answer: "6 sack" or "6 bag mix" has six bags of cement per cubic yard of concrete mix. Since each sack/bag contains 94 lbs of dry cement, this equals 564 lbs of cement per cubic yard of concrete.
A U.S. bag (or sack) of cement contains 94 lbs. Note this is for cement not premixed concrete where you just add water. The origin of 94 lbs/sack for cement comes from 1 cubic foot of loosly bagged cement weighs approximately 94 lbs; they were originally (and perhaps still) measured out by volume, but for weight calculations, the weight of 94 lbs became standardized.
144 lbs per cubic foot if I remember what my dad told me
mm (millimeters) are a measurement of length. lbs (pounds) are a measurement of weight. The two are not comparable nor compatible.
This can vary do to the mixture of sand, stone, cement... but an approximate average would be 3000 lbs
when we test the cement with the help of Le-Chatlier apparatus and then we found if the expansion is more than 10 mm then the cement is said to be unsoundness
This can vary do to the mixture of sand, stone, cement... but an approximate average would be 3000 lbs