The volume of 60 pounds of jelly beans can vary based on the size and shape of the beans, but a rough estimate is that jelly beans have a density of about 0.5 to 0.6 pounds per cubic inch. Using this estimate, 60 pounds of jelly beans would occupy approximately 100 to 120 cubic inches. However, for a more precise measurement, the specific density of the jelly beans in question would be needed.
Approx 60 beans.
A jelly bean weighs about one gram.
There are 60-65 beans.
It matters on the size of the jelly beans. If the ingredients say, "A cup of Jelly Beans" or something similar you could always just take the measuring cup and pour jelly beans in it until it reaches the top.
On October 15, 1999, the world's largest jar of jelly beans was unveiled. It weighed 6,050 pounds Each year, U.S. manufacturers produce more than 16 billion jelly beans for Easter -- that's enough to completely fill a plastic Easter egg 89 feet high and 60 feet wide (about the height of a nine-story office building)
A bushel is a unit of measurement used for dry volume, and one bushel is equivalent to 35.24 liters or about 1.244 cubic feet. In terms of beans, a bushel typically weighs around 60 pounds, though this can vary slightly depending on the type of bean. The volume of a bushel of beans remains consistent regardless of the bean type.
Wheat and soybeans: 1 bushel = 60 lb = 27.2155422 kg
Most types of beans will have around 60 pounds to the bushel, unless the crop was stressed to the point to where it had shriveled seed.
I don't know, but one way to find out is to weigh a cubic inch of jelly then multiply that weight by 1728 (123).
There are approximately 60 pounds in a bushel of soybeans. This measurement is standard in the United States for agricultural commodities. The weight can vary slightly based on moisture content and other factors, but 60 pounds is the accepted average.
Liters can't be converted to pounds. Liters measure volume, while pounds measure mass.
Oh, dude, math time, like, yay! So, 40 percent of 150,000 is just 0.4 times 150,000, which equals 60,000. So, like, if you had 150,000 jelly beans, 40 percent of them would be 60,000 jelly beans. Math is wild, man.