26500 liters
depends on size of bathtubs
there is one cubic meter that fits exactly in another cubic meter
You dont. A cubic meter is a measure of volume. A ton is a unit of weight. How do you convert the size of a class room to a ton? You don't. Now how do you covert the weight of a cubic meter of water to a ton? That would be a question that has an answer. A cubic meter of water weighs 1000 kg, or a metric ton. A Kilogram is equal to about 2.2 pounds. So a metric ton is equal to about 2200 poins or about 1.1 tons. A cubic meter of water weighs about 1.1 tons.
It depends on how you acquire it.If you put a barrel at the bottom end of a downspout on the corner of your house and let it fill with rain, its FREE.If you buy it from the city and it comes through a water meter at your house, its probably about $5.00 per HCF (hundred cubic feet). There are 35.314 cubic feet in a cubic meter, so if you buy it from a public utility, a cubic meter would cost about $0.35. (assuming your utility charges about what Akron, Ohio's does) Oh, and they include the cost of a sewer fee in this price, whether you use it or not.If you buy bottled water in 500ml single serving clear plastic containers at a dollar a bottle, a cubic meter of water would cost $2000.00. Now that they've made the bottles thinner and you always squish the bottle a bit trying to open it and often end up spilling some on your clothes, this method of buying water has lost some appeal, but its still popular. Go figure.
The answer will depend on the size of the milometer.
It depends on the size of the bags
It depends on the size of the bricks.
While this will depend on the size of the wheelbarrow, an industrial wheelbarrow is about 1/12th of a cubic meter. 12 of them is one meter, 1,200 of them for 100 cubic meters.
the size of you!>!CK
A cubic meter is 100 cm x 100 cm x 100 cm. 1,000,000 A mL is the same size as a cubic centimeter. So, the answer is 1,000,000 mL= one cubic meter Pardon my decimals in my numbers, I'm in America.
Not necessarily. The weight of a cubic metre of gravel varies, depending on the type of rock and its size. If it is any help, a cubic metre of water is Exactly a tonne. (ie 1000 litres= 1000kgs)
Dry gravel with a size ranging from one quarter inch to two inches will weigh about 1,682 kilograms per cubic meter.