You need several quantities to calculate concrete volume for corrugated metal decking. You need both the Flute height in inches, flute width in inches, flute foot in inches, sealant depth or thickness in inches, gap size in inches, and deck length in feet.
Mass is: M=V x d.To calculate the mass you need to know the density of this concrete and also the volume.
Arcs are curves, and as such have no volume.
This is the ratio volume/time.
Subtract what is left from the original volume.
Density is equal to the mass divided by the volume.
If it is a cubical block, the volume is simply length x height x width.
The depth of the pour would also be necessary to calculate the volume of concrete needed.
Mass is: M=V x d.To calculate the mass you need to know the density of this concrete and also the volume.
Mass is: M=V x d.To calculate the mass you need to know the density of this concrete and also the volume.
Oops . . . please repost your question and include the depth of the concrete. You have to have all 3 dimensions in order to calculate volume (Cubic Yards of concrete).
V of a circular slab = thickness of the slab multiplied by (pi multiplied by the radius2)
You cannot calculate standard deviation for objects such as concrete cubes - you can only calculate standard deviation for some measure - such as side length, surface area, volume, mass, alkalinity or some other measure.
go for autocad drawing....because every pier has it own shape.....mind it...
There is no way to calculate cost for a square foot of concrete (?" w x ?" l). In order to calculate cost you need to first calculate volume which requires a third dimension of height (?" w x ?" l x ?" h). Concrete is usually sold by the cubic yard (36" wide x 36" long x 36" high). Another factor in calculating price of concrete is distance to delivery location.
Calculate the volume of one sweet. Calculate the volume of the jar and then divide the volume of the jar by the volume of a sweet.
You need to calculate the total volume of the space that the concrete has to fill. if you're doing a slab 4" thick a cu. yd. will cover 81 sq. ft. Take the total area and divide by 81 to get the number of yard needed.
Calculate the volume of full cone. For this you need to reproduce the cone surface upto the point where radius becomes zero.Then deduct the volume of the portion which is cut from the full volume. You can't multiply the height to the average of bottom area and top area. Because area (pi.r^2) is the second degree function of radius, not first degree.