4267.12 pounds
salt
A cubic yard of rock salt typically weighs about 2,000 to 3,000 pounds, depending on the density and size of the salt crystals. This weight can vary based on the specific type of rock salt being used.
Road salt can mean many things. Some cities/countries use sodium chloride, some use calcium chloride. Anti-caking agents like sodium ferrocyanide are added to prevent clumping. That said, the weight of a volume of "road salt" be approximated by using using the density of ordinary salt, which is 2.165 grams per cubic centimeter. After dimensional analysis, you get a rough estimate of 3,650 pounds per cubic yard.
A square yard is not a volume, it is an area. I think you may mean a cubic yard.When calculating storage space requirements, use the figure 80 pounds per cubic foot or 2160 pounds per cubic yard.
Zero. Because cubic feet and grams measure different things Cubic feet measure capacity and grams measure weight, also they are not even the same measuring system. Cubic feet are imperial measurements and grams are metric measurements.
About 2.2 pounds of salt in a cubic foot of sea water. There are about 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot and sea water weighs about 8.5 pounds per gallon (63.58 pounds). Sea water is about 3.5 % salt (usually reported as 35 ppt or parts per thousand). So 63.58 x .035 = 2.2 pounds of salt.
About 25 cubic feet, or almost one cubic yard. Road salt weighs 80 pounds per cubic foot
The cost of a cubic yard of salt and pepper rock varies slightly by location. As of 2014, the average price is between 52.00 and 57.00 per cubic yard. Therefore 2 cubic yards costs between 104.00 and 114.00.
salt
A cubic yard of rock salt typically weighs about 2,000 to 3,000 pounds, depending on the density and size of the salt crystals. This weight can vary based on the specific type of rock salt being used.
A cubic yard is a measure of volume (length in feet X width in feet X depth in feet/27=cubic yards) and tons is a measure of weight. The weight of a material depends on its density, therefore, to determine the number of yards in a ton of material, the density of the material must be known.Sand has an average weight of 2,700 pounds per cubic yard (Refer to Table 1 in this chart of material weights http://www.age.psu.edu/extension/factsheets/h/H20.pdf). One ton is 2,000 pounds, therefore, there are 1.35 Tons in one cubic yard of sand.Inversely, if 1.35 tons of sand is equivalent to one cubic yard of sand, then using a ratio (tons|cubic yards), there are 0.74 cubic yards in one ton of sand.For those of you that prefer to see this answer as a mathematical calculation:length in feet X width in feet X depth in feet/27=cubic yardsSand = 2,700 lbs/cubic yards (*This value is specific to Sand)*2,700 lbs|1 Cu Yd * 1 Ton|2,000 lbs = 1.35 Ton|Cu YdOR 1|1.35 = 0.74074 Cu Yd in 1 Ton of SandOf course nature is not precise with sand and it's weight may varying to some degree based on the grain size, the moisture content, etc.
Road salt can mean many things. Some cities/countries use sodium chloride, some use calcium chloride. Anti-caking agents like sodium ferrocyanide are added to prevent clumping. That said, the weight of a volume of "road salt" be approximated by using using the density of ordinary salt, which is 2.165 grams per cubic centimeter. After dimensional analysis, you get a rough estimate of 3,650 pounds per cubic yard.
11 cubic feet of plain (non-salt) water weighs approximately 686.7 pounds or 311.5 kilograms.
A square yard is not a volume, it is an area. I think you may mean a cubic yard.When calculating storage space requirements, use the figure 80 pounds per cubic foot or 2160 pounds per cubic yard.
About 8.53 pounds.
Zero. Because cubic feet and grams measure different things Cubic feet measure capacity and grams measure weight, also they are not even the same measuring system. Cubic feet are imperial measurements and grams are metric measurements.
No where near 1 ton.