The cubic ton is a measure of volume. It is considered obsolete in the United Kingdom and is now used primarily in the United States.
Definitions
A mass-derived unit of volume is defined by reference to the density of some material. One common such material is water, used in multiple units. For the cubic ton, the situation is more complex—there are different cubic tons for different materials.
The 1964 Reader's Digest Great Encyclopaedic Dictionary gave the following ton-derived volumes:
- Timber, 40 cubic feet or 480.0 bd ft or 1.133 m3
- Stone, 16 cubic feet (0.453 m3)
- Salt, 42 US bushels (1.480 m3)
- Lime, 40 US bushels (1.410 m3)
- Coke, 28 US bushels (0.99 m3)
- Wheat, 20 US bushels (0.705 m3)
The nearest thing to a standard cubic ton seems to be the "timber" cubic ton (40 cubic feet or 1.133 cubic metres) which is used by freight transport operators in the US.[1][2]
Conversions
Converting cubic tons (i.e., volumes) to measures of weight presents difficulties because organic materials such as timber vary in density.
Approximate volume conversions, based on a timber cubic ton of 40 cubic feet:
- 1 ton (40 cubic feet) = 1.133 cubic metres
- 1 cubic metre = 0.883 cubic tons (35.32 cubic feet)
See also
References
- ↑ http://www.saia.com/Glossary/default.asp#C
- ↑ "Glossary — National Air Cargo". Archived from the original on 2007-10-07. Retrieved 2007-05-11.