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Bricks come in many different sizes. One of the most common is 215mm x 65mm. Add space for mortar and each brick will take up an area of about 225 x 75 (about 9 inches by 3 inches). Therefore there will be 36 bricks in each row and 30 rows so the wall will need a little more than 1000 bricks.
1000 bricks
Math says 4 1/2 4"x8" bricks are needed to cover 1 sq. ft. So 9 bricks will cover 2 sq ft. That needs to happen 500 times so you need 9x500 or 4500 bricks sized 4"x8" to cover 1000 sq ft.
In Homer's Iliad, Hector was the Trojan prince who led his troops in the Trojan War. It is not clear from the question as to whether the square metres are in the context of his empire or how much space he occupied personally.By the way, 1 hectare = 10000 sq metres.
563 over 1000 as a percent is 56.3%.I determined this by first writing the original fraction: 563/1000. Then, simply move the decimal one space to the left in order to make the denominator 100. This makes 1000 become 100. This must be done to the numerator (563) as well. Moving the decimal one space to the left in 563, it becomes 56.3. Any number over 100 can be written as a decimal.
This depends on the size of the bricks. If the bricks are the same shape and size and a rectangle then they will cover their length*width*1000. If the bricks aren't the same size and shape then you would need to know the dimensions of each brick.
Remember 1000 kg = 1 tonne. 3500 g = 3.5 kg = 1 brick 6.4tonnes = 6.4x 1000 = 6400 kg. Divide 6400 / 3.5 = 1828.57 bricks NB If ordering from a builders yard/supplier you would order 2000 bricks. The balance would account for breakages/loss.
Well , taking into account the average brick size : In the United States, modern bricks are usually about 8 × 4 × 2.25 inches (203 × 102 × 57 mm).That gives us a volume of 1180242 cubic mm per brick. That translates into 1,180242 cubic dm , and 1 cubic metre contains 1000 dm .That gives us an answer of 1000 / 1,180242 = 847,283... bricks in a cubic metre.So , around 847. ( Assuming US bricks. )
Bricks come in many different sizes. One of the most common is 215mm x 65mm. Add space for mortar and each brick will take up an area of about 225 x 75 (about 9 inches by 3 inches). Therefore there will be 36 bricks in each row and 30 rows so the wall will need a little more than 1000 bricks.
1000 bricks
No, that wouldn't be near enough. If the bricks were 4" by 8" that wouldn't be enough for one side of an 8' by 22' garage. The size of the brick, the size of the mortar joints, number of doors and windows and whether or not it is attached all factor in.
both.
60% of the occupied housing stock in Canada is owner-occupied.
1000
They both weigh 1000 pounds, exactly the same. They both weigh 1000 pounds, exactly the same.
1000 km
A brick weighs 2.2 pounds, 1 Kilo, A kilo is 1000 grams, Its easy to remember.