You don't, because a cubic yard does not belong to the metric system.
One yard is APPROXIMATELY equivalent to one meter, so one cubic yard would be approximately equal to one cubic meter. If you want to convert them exactly, there are lots of calculators around that will do that for you.
liter or gallon ANOTHER OPINION. The previous answer is partly correct only. FLUID volume is measured in the Imperial system in Pints, Quarts, Gallons FLUID volume in the Metric system (SI units) is in Litres, Millilitres SOLIDS volume is in Cubic Feet, Cubic Yard, Cubic Inch (Imperial measure) SOLIDS volume is in Cubic Metre, Cubic Centimetre (cc)
All of the above except the yard. Yards are an Imperial measurement, not metric.
metric ruler
Nine 3 cubic feet bags equals one cubic yard. There are 27 cubic feet in one cubic yard. 27/3=9
One yard is APPROXIMATELY equivalent to one meter, so one cubic yard would be approximately equal to one cubic meter. If you want to convert them exactly, there are lots of calculators around that will do that for you.
14.82 Metric Tons 1 cubic meter of water is 1 metric ton, 1 cubic yard is 0.7835 cubic meters 0.91 X 0.91 X 0.91 = 0.7835 of 1 cubic meter Gold is 19 times heavier than water, therefore 0.7835 X 19 = 14.82 Metric Tons.
A yard is 91.44 cm One cubic yard is 91.44x91.44x91.44=764554.857984 cubic cm, or .765 cubic meters. Concrete and sand are often measured in cubic yards. In metric countries it is measured in cubic meters. Roughly there are 1.3 cubic yards in a cubic meter.
It's aa Liteer My Dudeee Or Dudette :*The standard unit of volume in the metric system is the liter. One liter is equal to 1000 cubic centimeters in volume.Liters. There are also variations of the liter, such as the milliliter, deciliter, kiloliter, and so forthIt is the cubic meter.
A metre.
One cubic meter (~1 cubic yard) of water is one metric 1 ton, or ~2200 lbs. Plaster is heavier, my guess is about 1.5 tons. Bagster "containers" can hold up to 3300 lbs and they limit heavy debris to one cubic yard.
liter or gallon ANOTHER OPINION. The previous answer is partly correct only. FLUID volume is measured in the Imperial system in Pints, Quarts, Gallons FLUID volume in the Metric system (SI units) is in Litres, Millilitres SOLIDS volume is in Cubic Feet, Cubic Yard, Cubic Inch (Imperial measure) SOLIDS volume is in Cubic Metre, Cubic Centimetre (cc)
All of the above except the yard. Yards are an Imperial measurement, not metric.
No. Imperial. The Metre (to use its correct, French, spelling - not 'meter'!) is the nearest metric unit to the yard, at roughly 39 inches, but that is co-incidental. They are in totally different systems.
In 1869Congress legalized the use of the metric system. In 1893 the Office of Weights and Measures adopted the metric system in legally defining the yard and the pound.
A yard is 914.4 millimetres. 39 inches is 990.6 millimetres.
Yard is an obsolete British unit and must be avoided.1 yard equals 0,9144 metre.