1000 kg
There are 1000 liters in a cubic meter. If you have a water meter, to work out the cost per m3 add the cost of water per m3 (around £1) and the cost of sewage per m2 (around £1.5) give you your total cost per m3 (around £2.5). So a 6 liter toilet flush cost about 1.5 Pence. A 65 liter shower (around 5 min shower on a mains pressure mixer shower) will cost around 16.25 pence On your water meter the small dials are: x0.001 dial = 1 liters. x0.01 dial = 10 liters x0.1 dial = 100 liters (once this dial has clocked around to 10, that = 1000 liters or 1m3)
To fill a container that can hold 100 litres, you would need 100 litres of water.
10,000 Imperial gallons: 45,460.9 litres 10,000 US gallons: 37,854.12 litres
Since 1 liter of water weighs 1 kilogram, 1500 liters of water would weigh 1500 kilograms.
The weight of 1m3 of type 1 MOT stone is typically around 1,900-2,000 kg, depending on the specific density and characteristics of the stone.
2m3 is 2,000 litres as there are 1000 litres in 1m3
1x1x1= 1m3. 1m3 = 1000 litres
1m3
0.0005m3 500ml is half a litre. There are 1000 litres in 1m3.
1m3 = 1,000 litres 9m x 5m x 1.5m = 67.5m3 67.5m3 = 67,500 litres
One cubic metre of concrete weighs 2.5 Tonnes. Typically, 1m3 of concrete is made up of 350Kg of cement, 700Kg of sand, 1,200Kg of chippings and 150 Litres of water. http://www.planete-tp.com/en/article.php3?id_article=221
density of sand is approx 2.6 kg/L density = mass / volume => mass = volume * density and as 1m3 = 1000 litres mass = 1000 litres * 2.6 kg/l =2600kgs
500k g
There are 1000 liters in a cubic meter. If you have a water meter, to work out the cost per m3 add the cost of water per m3 (around £1) and the cost of sewage per m2 (around £1.5) give you your total cost per m3 (around £2.5). So a 6 liter toilet flush cost about 1.5 Pence. A 65 liter shower (around 5 min shower on a mains pressure mixer shower) will cost around 16.25 pence On your water meter the small dials are: x0.001 dial = 1 liters. x0.01 dial = 10 liters x0.1 dial = 100 liters (once this dial has clocked around to 10, that = 1000 liters or 1m3)
It would take 1m3 of water. The metre cubed is the base unit of volume. For ease of use most domestic volumes are measured in litres, 1 litre is 1dm3 or 0.001m3, so there are 1000 litres in 1 metre cubed. one metre cubed would take 1000 litres. The density of water at 20oC is 998.207 kgm-3, so one metre cubed of water will weigh 998.207 kilograms.
1m2
Yes.