Dry sand commonly has a density of between 1400-1600 kg/m3 depending on it's level of compaction.
Therefore a cubic metre of sand will have a mass of between 1400 and 1600 kg and a weight of between 13,734 and 15,696 Newtons.
Of what alloy, exactly? "Alloy" simply means a mixture of metals, and some metals are about 40 times heavier (denser, actually) than others.
1 cubic metre.
1 cubic metre = 1000 litres.
There are 1000 litres in 1 cubic metre.
Sand, dirt, gravel and even concrete is measured by the cubic yard and each cubic yard is 1 unit. therefore 1 unit of sand = 27 cubic feet Hence 1 unit of sand = .772 cubic meters
There isn't really a kilolitre. The unit for volume in the SI is the cubic metre. The normal prefixes get a little confused because of the cubing. One cubic metre equals 1 000 litres. So if a kilolitre is a thousand litres, it is one cubic metre.
1 perfect cubic metre of sand=1 perfect cubic metre of glass
The weight (not mass) of 1 cubic metre of sugar is approx 8280 Newtons.
1 and half tons
No relationship, because cubic metre is volume and ounce is weight.
The basic formula is 1 cubic metre = 1 metre x 1 metre x 1 metre.
1 cubic metre of barley weighs approx 6130 Newtons.
For the purpose of calculating joist sizes for Hay Loft, - what is the weight of a cubic foot or cubic metre of baled hay?
"1 cubic meter" is a perfectly good 'quantity'. If the 'quantity' you want is the weight instead, then you need to know a unit weight or density for sand, in order to convert a volume to a weight.
It is a volume of 1 cubic metre.It is a volume of 1 cubic metre.It is a volume of 1 cubic metre.It is a volume of 1 cubic metre.
Using building sand density @ 110 pounds per cubic foot (1.762 tonne per cubic metre) > volume = mass / density volume = 1 / 1.762 = 0.5675 cubic metres > Note: if you have a different value for the sand density, replace 1.762 with your figure ( in tonnes per cubic metre) , and calculate.
I cubic metre can be represented as a cube with all sides of length 1 metre.
It is 1 cubic metre.