Actually you can do this problem..
First Convert Cubic Feet to Gallons
(7.4805gal/1 cubic feet)
Second: Convert gallons to quarts
Third: Convert quarts to ounces
Fourth: Convert ounces to lbs
Fifth: Convert lbs to grams: (454g/1lb)
Finally: g to kilograms...that should be easy..just a matter of moving the decimal place three to the left
lol....you dont...kg is the metric equivalent to a pound... which dont really wiegh the same, a metric foot is a measure of distance, not weight, and visa versa...i hope this helped
Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.Cubic feet is a measure of volume; kilogram is a unit of mass. You don't convert that.
This depends on what substance and at what temperature at sea level. Cubic feet is a volume. Kilogram is a weight. Give me a substance and I'll tell you how.
You convert everything to compatible units (volume should be in cubic meters or in liters), find the density of aggregate, and multiply the volume by the density to get the mass.
convert milimeter to cubic feet
You can convert cubic feet to cubic meters, or feet to meters. But you can't convert cubic feet to meters.
To convert from cubic feet to cubic yards, multiply cubic feet by 0.037. So, 270 x 0.037 = 46.99 cubic yards.
You can't convert cubic feet into inches.But you can convert cubic feet into cubicinches.5.3 cubic feet is the same volume as 9,158.4 cubic inches.
This is no a possible conversion, because you can not convert a factor of distance (metre) to a weight (kilogram)
To convert cubic metres to cubic feet, multiply by 35.314667 To convert cubic feet to cubic metres, multiply by 0.028316847
Multiply the cubic metres by 35.315 to get cubic feet.
Cubic miles x 147,197,952,000 = cubic feet.
Divide cubic feet by 27 to get cubic yards.