To convert 1 sack of white sand to cubic meters, you first need to determine the weight of the sack in kilograms. Typically, a standard sack of sand weighs about 40 kilograms. Since the density of white sand is roughly 1,600 kg/m³, you can use the formula: volume (m³) = weight (kg) / density (kg/m³). For a 40 kg sack, the conversion would be approximately 0.025 m³ (40 kg ÷ 1,600 kg/m³).
To determine how many 100-pound sacks of barite will fit in a 76 cubic meter silo, we first need to convert cubic meters to cubic feet (1 cubic meter = 35.3147 cubic feet). A 100-pound sack of barite typically occupies about 0.5 cubic feet. Therefore, a 76 cubic meter silo is approximately 2,688 cubic feet, allowing for around 5,376 sacks (2,688 cubic feet divided by 0.5 cubic feet per sack).
A "sack" is not a standard unit of measure, sacks come in many sizes. For this reason one can not say in general how many cubic meters of gravel any sack contains.
.936 cubic feet
The density of sand can vary, but a common value is around 1,600 kg/m^3. Assuming this density, 1 cubic meter of sand would weigh 1,600 kg. If a bag of sand typically weighs around 20 kg, you would need 80 bags of sand to fill 1 cubic meter.
1.5 (Sack of Barite = 100 pounds) (Cubic foot of Barite = 150 pounds) (Density of Barite - 2.087)
The spider with a white sack on its back is likely a female wolf spider carrying her egg sac.
* CEMENT: 1 Sack = 94 lbs. so we can say that sack is nothing but one cement bags(50 kg)
1.6 cubic feet = 1sack of barite .6 cubic feet = 1 sack (100 pounds ) bentonite
~ 1 cu. ft.
The answer is, remarkably, 6. Answer: "6 sack" or "6 bag mix" has six bags of cement per cubic yard of concrete mix. Since each sack/bag contains 94 lbs of dry cement, this equals 564 lbs of cement per cubic yard of concrete.
No, rick Hansen did.
Reggie White - 21 in 1987.