On a per-foot basis, it would be the thickness of the wall in feet multiplied by the height in feet multiplied by the combined density of the brick and mortar. My AISC manual has 120 lbs per cubic foot for a normal brick wall, so a typical single wythe wall (4" thick) would weigh 40 lbs square foot of face area.
It is length*width*height - in suitable measurement units.
To calculate the weight of a concrete slab measuring 4 feet by 4 feet with a thickness of 4 inches, first convert the thickness to feet: 4 inches is 1/3 feet. The volume is then 4 ft x 4 ft x (1/3 ft) = 16/3 cubic feet. Concrete typically weighs about 150 pounds per cubic foot, so the weight of the slab is approximately 16/3 ft³ x 150 lbs/ft³ = 800 lbs.
To calculate the concrete quantity for a reinforced concrete slab, first determine the slab's dimensions: length, width, and thickness. Use the formula: Volume = Length × Width × Thickness. Convert all measurements to the same unit (e.g., meters) for accuracy, and then multiply to get the volume in cubic meters. Finally, consider adding a percentage for waste and over-excavation, typically around 5-10%.
To calculate the formula for a 4-inch concrete slab, you typically convert the thickness from inches to feet by dividing by 12. A 4-inch slab is 4/12 = 1/3 feet thick. When calculating the volume (cubic feet) for a slab, the formula is Volume = Length × Width × Thickness. If the slab covers an area of 80 square feet, multiplying that area by the thickness (1/3 feet) gives you 80 cubic feet.
if the slab is one inches thick, it should be 8.8 pound per squire foot.
Density of brick bat coba
to answer your question, one must know the thickness of the slab? then only the weight can be calculated
It is not always mandatory that we will have a RCC bed below any brick wall. In ground floor without basement the brick wall stands on common concrete slab not RCC slab, in other floors slab has to be made of RCC, hence brick wall stands on RCC.
The weight of a 20mm marble slab depends on its dimensions and the density of the marble. On average, marble has a density of about 2.7 grams per cubic centimeter. To find the weight, you would calculate the volume of the slab (length x width x thickness) in cubic centimeters and then multiply by the marble's density. For example, a 1m x 1m slab would weigh approximately 54 kg.
If you know the dimensions of the slab, assuming that the slab is solid and in the shape of a rectangle, box, or square, you can calculate the volume with the formula: LxWxH which is length times width times height. This will give you the volume of the slab in cubic units (meters, feet, inches, whatever). Depending on the type of steel, you will have a different density ratio which can be used to calculate the weight of the slab. The density of low grade steel is something on the order of: 7850 kg/m3 so you would multiply your volume by the density ratio to get kilograms. If you know the weight of the slab and the type of steel, you can calculate the volume by dividing the weight by the density ratio. I hope this helps, perhaps you could provide more details on the type of steel and the exact property of the slab that you need (volume, weight, density.
V of a circular slab = thickness of the slab multiplied by (pi multiplied by the radius2)
You could remove the brick and frame a wall on top of the brick ledge, even with the outside of the slab, then run your siding. You will also have to consider what to do with the brick frieze at the soffit.
Multiply the length by the breadth. eg if slab is 2 ft by 3 ft then area of slab = 6 sq feet
45kg
Just like your tummy slab tranfers your weight to your leg beams
The answer will depend on 4 inch slab of what material!
Just like your tummy slab tranfers your weight to your leg beams