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1 cubic yard of crushed rock fills 3/depth in feet square yards.
it is the same weigh.
About 35... there are 27cubic feet in one cubic yard so determine how many cubic feet you need and divide by 27... in your case 52x 18x 1= 936 cubic feet 936/27= 34.66 cubic yards
Various types of rock are used as construction and landscaping materials. For example, crushed granite is a convenient and inexpensive material for paving driveways and garden paths. It is necessary on such projects to figure out the cubic yards of material needed, and rock is usually sold in cubic yards. A cubic yard is a measurement of volume, rather than area, and it tells you how much material is needed to fill a space, instead of just covering the surface.Measure the length and width, in feet, of the area to be covered.Multiply the length by the width to get the square footage. For example, 20 feet multiplied by 10 feet is 200 square feet.Measure the depth you want, in inches--how high you want the layer of crushed granite or other rock. Multiply this number by the square footage. For example, 200 square feet multiplied by 2 inches is 400.Divide this by 324, the number of inches in a cubic yard (a cubic yard is 27 cubic feet). For example, 400 divided by 324 is 1.2 cubic yards
19.38 cubic yards. Round up to at least 20 yards.
1 cubic yard of crushed rock fills 3/depth in feet square yards.
Depends on material. 1.25 yards of feathers is lighter that 1.25 yards of lead.
For the calculus you need the density of this rock: M = V x d.
No they are not. River rock is rounded and smooth where crushed rock is sharp and jagged.
What is differences between crushed rock and crushed sand
The texture.
Multiply length (feet) X width (feet) X depth (inches). Divide by 12, then divide by 27. That will get you how many yards you need. Since you do not indicate the depth in your question, I cannot calculate for you. If you want to know how many tons multiply your yards by 1.3 for crushed rock. Hope this gets you what you asked for.
yes
The crushed rock pieces have a greater surface area then whole rock giving more exposure to weathering.
molten rock
The answer will depend on how fine the rock is crushed and the depth to which the area needs to be covered.
pebbles, talus, scree, crushed stone, or crushed rock