It depends on how big the originial un-crushed rock was. If you specify a weight for the original rock then maybe a formula can be devised for this question. However, anything that is solid and then broken into smaller particles will weigh less because some of the particles disappear from the area where you crushed the original form (they may become too small to measure so the weight decreases cosiderably and is more spread out ).
Specific gravity of glass is 2.5 grams per cubic centimeter. It depends on the density ofglass.
2,000 lbs.
Standard 1/4" thick 'plate' glass weighs 3.2 lbs per square foot. A cubic foot of glass weighs 162 pounds. A square foot of 3/8" glass weights 5 pounds.
That depends how thick you spread it! It would make more sense to ask about the weight (or mass) per cubic yard, cubic foot, etc.
Typical window glass weighs 156 pounds per cubic foot. For comparison, a cubic foot of aluminum weighs about 168 pounds, and a cubic foot of oak is around 50 pounds.
175 lbs
Nothing by itself. The cubic foot must be full of some kind of matter to have weight. Obviously, a cubic foot of feathers will weigh far, far less than a cubic foot of lead.
It depends how small it is crushed and how tightly it's packed. The smaller it's crushed and more tightly it's packed, the heavier it is as there is more ice and less space between the pieces of ice. In the most finely crushed and firmly packed volumes of the frozen stuff, the cubic foot of crushed ice will approach being a solid block. A cubic foot of water weighs about 62.4 pounds. A solid block of ice of the same volume weighs about 57.5 pounds. A cubic foot of "normal" crushed ice might weigh 35 to 45 pound range. And it could weigh more or less.
Standard 1/4" thick 'plate' glass weighs 3.2 lbs per square foot. A cubic foot of glass weighs 162 pounds. A square foot of 3/8" glass weights 5 pounds.
Typical window glass weighs 156 pounds per cubic foot. For comparison, a cubic foot of aluminum weighs about 168 pounds, and a cubic foot of oak is around 50 pounds.
That depends how thick you spread it! It would make more sense to ask about the weight (or mass) per cubic yard, cubic foot, etc.
180 lbs. per cubic ft. crushed.
yes, a way to find out if it weighs more, which has a greater density
Pulverised coal = 38 pounds per cubic foot
450
It would weigh 1,342 pounds.
whats sugar beets weigh
1 cubic foot of iron, at room temperature would weigh approx 2190 newtons.
No gallons of water. Stone does not contain water