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1 ton = 2000 pounds 2000/60 = 33.3 bags of 60 pounds to make 1 ton
1 ton of quartz sand weighs 2,000 pounds, and oranges are colored orange.
1 metric ton = 1000 Kg It doesn't matter if it is dry sand, wet sand or anything else. A 'metric ton' is often just called a 'tonne', to distinguish it from the other two types of tons (British ton and US ton).
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One ton equal to how many cft
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1 ton = 2000 pounds 2000/60 = 33.3 bags of 60 pounds to make 1 ton
To calculate how many wheelbarrows of sand equal 1 cubic yard, you first need to determine the volume of a wheelbarrow. The typical wheelbarrow has a volume of around 6 cubic feet. Since 1 cubic yard is equivalent to 27 cubic feet, you would need approximately 4.5 wheelbarrows of sand to equal 1 cubic yard (27 cubic feet ÷ 6 cubic feet per wheelbarrow = 4.5 wheelbarrows).
1 ton of quartz sand weighs 2,000 pounds, and oranges are colored orange.
1 metric ton = 1000 Kg It doesn't matter if it is dry sand, wet sand or anything else. A 'metric ton' is often just called a 'tonne', to distinguish it from the other two types of tons (British ton and US ton).
Well a ton is 2,000 lbs. So probably a small car can be a ton. Or you have have 1 ton of rock,soil, sand.
One m3 = TON * 2.4
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 ton, but I don't know whether that's a short ton or a long ton. A cubic ton is a measurement of volume (i.e. how much space it takes up). A cubic ton of sand is how much space a ton of sand takes up. A cubic ton of timber is how much space a ton of timber takes up, and as timber is lighter than sand, a cubic ton of timber is larger than a cubic ton of sand, even though they both weigh the same. As for the volume of a cubic ton of sand, I have no idea. You could get a rough answer this way: "m" divided by "d" where m =one ton in whatever units you are using (e.g. kg) and d = density of sand (in the same units)
It depends on the density of the sand, between about 1.4 tons dry, 1.7 tons rammed, dry. Wet sand will be heavier.