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Every construction site receives truckloads of materials daily — sand, gravel, stone aggregate, earth fill. But here is the real question: do you actually know how much material arrived on that truck?
The driver says it is fully loaded. The weighbridge slip is in your hand. Yet without calculating the actual site density, you are still making decisions blindly. This guide walks you through a complete, practical system to verify every delivery before you pay.
Are You Losing Money on Every Delivery?
Most site engineers accept material deliveries based on the driver's word and the weighbridge slip alone. That is a costly mistake. Without verifying the actual volume and density, you have no way to confirm that what arrived matches what you ordered.
You ordered 50 BRASS of stone aggregate at ₹2,500 per BRASS from a supplier. The truck arrives. Driver assures it is fully loaded. You accept the weighbridge slip without measuring the dimensions yourself.
Result? You received 43 BRASS but paid for 50 BRASS.
Measure the Truck Body Yourself
The most common mistake on site is trusting the driver. Always measure it yourself. You need the internal dimensions of the truck's dump box — the area where the material actually sits.
| Dimension | Where to Measure | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| Length | Front to back of the dump box (inside) | Feet + Inches |
| Width | Side to side (inside only) | Feet + Inches |
| Height | Floor up to the material surface | Feet + Inches |
Volume Formula
Volume (CFT) = Length (ft) × Width (ft) × Height (ft)
// Convert inches to feet first
12 ft 6 in → 12 + (6 ÷ 12) = 12.5 ft
// Example
15.5 ft × 7.5 ft × 1.75 ft = 203.44 CFT
Read Your Weighbridge Slip Correctly
Every weighbridge (kanta) slip contains three key values. Understanding them is essential to verifying your delivery.
| Value on Slip | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Gross Weight | Total weight of the fully loaded truck |
| Tare Weight | Weight of the empty truck alone |
| Net Weight | Weight of material only = Gross − Tare |
Actual Density (KG/CFT) = Net Weight ÷ Volume (CFT)
Actual Density (KG/CUM) = Net Weight ÷ (Volume CFT ÷ 35.3147)
Standard Material Density Table
Compare your site-calculated density against these standard benchmarks used across Indian construction sites.
| Material | Density (KG/CUM) | Density (KG/CFT) | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| River Sand | 1,600 – 1,750 | 45 – 50 | Common |
| Stone Aggregate 20mm | 1,400 – 1,600 | 40 – 45 | Common |
| Stone Chips 10mm | 1,350 – 1,550 | 38 – 44 | Common |
| Earth Fill / Murrum | 1,700 – 1,900 | 48 – 54 | Common |
| Crushed Stone Dust | 1,500 – 1,700 | 42 – 48 | Common |
| Gravel (Mixed) | 1,450 – 1,650 | 41 – 47 | Varies |
Rate Conversion — One Material, Many Units
Different suppliers quote in different units. The same material appears to have a different price per TON, per BRASS, per CUM, or per CFT — but they all represent the same value once correctly converted.
1 CUM = 35.3147 CFT
1 TON = 1,000 KG
Rate/CFT = Rate/BRASS ÷ 100
Rate/CUM = Rate/CFT × 35.3147
Rate/KG = Rate/TON ÷ 1,000
Rate/BRASS = Rate/KG × Density(KG/CFT) × 100
Doing these conversions manually every time is slow and error-prone. The Smart Calculator below handles all of this automatically — enter your rate in any unit and it instantly shows the equivalent in all others.
๐งฎ Smart Density & Rate Calculator
Enter truck dimensions, weighbridge data & purchase rate — get instant density, conversions & total cost
| Unit | Converted Rate |
|---|---|
| Per KG | ₹ 0.00 |
| Per CFT | ₹ 0.00 |
| Per CUM | ₹ 0.00 |
| Per TON | ₹ 0.00 |
| Per BRASS | ₹ 0.00 |
₹ 0
Red Flags You Should Never Ignore
These warning signs suggest a delivery may be short, tampered, or of poor quality. Investigate before making payment.
Density 25%+ Below Standard
Material has excessive voids, is undersized, or the truck is genuinely underfilled.
Weight Doesn't Match Slip
Wrong truck may have been weighed, or the weighbridge slip has been altered.
Large Volume Discrepancy
Material surface was uneven, or the truck was only partially loaded before delivery.
Driver Refuses Measurement
A clear indicator the delivery is short. Do not accept or sign until you measure.
Wild Density Variation
Inconsistent readings across deliveries from the same supplier — possible manipulation.
High Weight in Monsoon
Wet material absorbs water and weighs more without delivering more volume.
Pro Tips for Site Engineers
- 01
Measure every delivery for the first 2–3 weeks when starting with a new supplier — it establishes a baseline and sends a clear message.
- 02
Maintain a simple delivery register — record volume, net weight, calculated density, and date for every truck. This becomes powerful evidence if a dispute arises.
- 03
Account for moisture content — wet sand and aggregate weigh significantly more than dry material. Always compare with a dry density reference when possible.
- 04
Calculate a monthly density average per supplier. If variation exceeds 10–15%, raise the issue formally before continuing orders.
- 05
Use verified site density from confirmed deliveries to project future procurement quantities more accurately and avoid costly over-ordering.
Complete Workflow at a Glance
Measure
Truck internal dimensions with tape
Weigh
Collect and verify weighbridge slip
Calculate
Net weight and actual site density
Convert
Rate across TON / CFT / CUM / BRASS
Verify
Total payable amount vs delivery
Record
Log every delivery in your register
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