According to the related link, PHYSLINK.COM, "1 cubic foot of air at standard temperature and pressure assuming average composition weighs approximately 0.0807 lbs".
The weight of air is highly dependant on the air temperature and barometric pressure.
Weigh, implies a spring scale, answer would be zero. How much mass does 100 cubic feet of air have would be a better question.
You can't convert that - it just doesn't make sense. You can convert (for example) feet to inches, and cubic feet to cubic inches. But you can't convert a unit of volume (like cubic inches) to a unit of length (like feet).
A cubic yard is a box one yard on each side.1 cubic yard = 1 yard x 1 yard x 1 yard.There are 3 feet in one yard.1 cubic yard = 3 feet x 3 feet x 3 feet.3x3x3 = your answer9
how much does 100ltrs diesel weigh in tons
Invalid conversion. Square feet measures area while cubic feet measures volume.
328.0839895 ft Direct Conversion Formula 100.0 m* 1 ft 0.3048 m = 328.0839895 ft
100 cubic feet = 2831.7 litres.
It all depends on what you have in the cubic feet. -- If the cubic feet are full of air, they weigh about 8 pounds. -- If they're full of water, they weight about 6,243 pounds (3.1 tons). -- If they're full of lead, they weigh about 70,793 pounds (35.4 tons). -- If the cubic feet are completely empty, they weigh exactly zero.
100 cubic feet is a volume, not an area. Consequently the question is misguided.
100 cubic feet is 0.002295684 acre-feet.
100 cubic feet = 2.83 cubic meters
100 cubic feet.
The volume you are trying to fill is 120000 cubic feet(100 x 100 x 12)1 cubic foot = 6.22883288 Imperial gallonsSo your pond of 120000 cubic feet would take about 747456 gallons to fill.or1 cubic foot = 28.3168466 litresSo your pond of 120000 cubic feet would take about 3397920 litres to fill.
You can convert cubic feet to cubic meters, or feet to meters. But you can't convert cubic feet to meters.
1ccf = 100 cubic feet.
Each .5 cubic feet bag of pea gravel will weigh approx. 50lbs.
300 feet by 100 feet by 10 feet = 300,000 cubic feet
As a wild guess, I would say, possibly, to the nearest cubic foot, the answer is 100.