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Oh, dude, you're asking about wheelbarrows and cubic meters? That's like asking how many puppies fit in a swimming pool! Okay, technically speaking, it depends on the size of the wheelbarrow, but on average, you'd need about 25-30 regular-sized wheelbarrows to fill up a cubic meter. But seriously, who measures things in wheelbarrows these days?
The answer depends on the density of the stone.
Assuming a typical wheelbarrow holds around 0.05 cubic meters, you would need around 2,000 wheelbarrows to move 100 cubic meters of material.
twelve
( 1 ) divided by (the capacity, in cubic meters, of the wheelbarrow you're using)
To convert standard cubic meters to liters, you can multiply by 1000. This is because there are 1000 liters in one cubic meter. So, if you have 1 standard cubic meter, it is equivalent to 1000 liters.
Convert standard cubic meter per hour to million million standard cubic feet per day?
According to concrete taxi: http://www.concretetaxi.com/faq.asp#77 ~15 wheelbarrow loads in a single cubic meter of concrete According to concrete taxi: http://www.concretetaxi.com/faq.asp#77 ~15 wheelbarrow loads in a single cubic meter of concrete
if it is solid stone, I don't think there will be any wheel barrows in there, unless you carve one out
It depends of course a bit on the size of the wheelbarrow and on how high you want to pile up the sand. But a typical wheelbarrow might hold about 85 liters of sand. 1 cubic meter equals 1,000 liters. So you would need about 12 wheelbarrow loads to get 1 cubic meter.
1 liter = 1000 milliliters 1 milliliter = 1 cubic centimeter 1 liter = 1000 cubic centimeter 1 cubic meter = 1,000,000 cubic centimeter 1 cubic meter = 1,000,000 milliliter 1 cubic meter = 1000 liter OR 1 liter = 0.001 cubic meter