The answer is specific to the product in the cu ft. A cu ft of water will be different than that of a cu ft of feathers ETC.
1 cu. ft. = 28.32 liters
1 cubic foot of water weighs 62.42 lbs. so 20x12=240x240=57600 sq inx1= 57600 cu in . 1 cubic foot =1728 cu in. 57600/1728=33.333 33.333x62.42=2080.45 lbs
To find the Volume: (1) find the flat area (A = Pi*R²), (2) multiply the Area by the Depth/Height (V = AD). To find how much water the vessel will hold: water = 231 cu inches per gallon, or 7.481 gal per cu ft.
1 ft = 0.3048 m (exactly) → 1 cu ft = 1 ft x 1 ft x 1 ft = 0.3048 m x 0.3048 m x 0.3048 m ≈ 0.02832 cu m
35 to 40 lbs per cu ft
The answer is specific to the product in the cu ft. A cu ft of water will be different than that of a cu ft of feathers ETC.
Without knowing a cubic foot of WHAT- there is no way to answer your question.
The pound, a measure of mass, does not convert directly to cubic feet, a measure of volume. It will depend on the size and shape and densities of the foods being frozen.
I need one and a haft yards of sand. If the bags hold 2 cu feet how many bags do I need
48 foot trailer: 3000 cu. ft. or 30,000 lbs 53 foot trailer: 3400 cu. ft. or 34,000 lbs.
The density of steel is typically around 490 pounds per cubic foot in English units.
Cubic feet (cu ft) is a measure of volume, representing the amount of space an object fills. Pounds (lbs) is a measure of weight, representing the force of gravity acting on an object. So, cubic feet measures volume, while pounds measure weight.
Your dimensions 3' x 3' x 4" equate to .1 cubic yard. One cu yd of concrete weighs from 2000 to 3500 lbs, depending on the mix. Commercial concrete is around 3200 lbs per cu yd, so your .1 cu yd would weigh 320 lbs.
At an average of about 30 lbs per cubic foot, that is about 20/30 = 2/3 cubic feet. A little less if wet, about 1 cu ft if really dry
lets see:1 US gallon = 0.133680556 cubic feetconcrete weights about 150 lbs / cu ft.145 lbs unreinforced.145 x .133680556 = 19.38368062 lbs
A container that is 35200 cubic feet will hold approximately 262,976 gallons.