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To convert the weight of the sand into a volume and find out how much you need you would need to know the density of the sand as the more dense it is the less sand there will be in a 50lb bag and the more bags you would then need to fill the yard
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45
If you fill it to four feet deep, the total is 10,408 gallons of water.
50lb bags 3.7 60lb bags 3.1 80lb bags 2.3 90lb bags 2.1 These amounts are for using the redi-mix bags.
80# bags are 0.6 cubic feet and it takes 41 to make a cubic yard. In that case, 60# bags must be 0.45 cubic feet and it would take 55 to make a cubic yard.
roughly 2900 bags of 80Lbs. bags. (would actually make 64.4 Yds cube better to get trucks and pumper each truck canaries one truck carries about 8-9 Cubic yards
bags of what?
air
A 40 lb. bag of soil containing 2 cu.ft.3 will cover 25 sq.ft. @ 1" inch deep. My guess then would be 4 or more -40lb. bags would take care of 24 sq.ft. 4" deep.
The most logical approach for this, would be to purchase a bag of quickcrete, and a few plastic bowls from your local hardware store. Then sit the legs of your dining set into the bowls and fill with quickcrete. this should effectively weigh down your patio set without harming your patio or deck, and without altering the functionality of your patio dining set.
ABOUT 43 bags. Dry sand weighs ABOUT 100 lbs per cubic foot- and you need 21.3 cubic feet.
20 bags. 16 oz are in a pound. 10 X 16 = 160 160/8 = 20
Fill them with shopping
I use one bag to 1 1/2 bags per hole and fill the rest of the way back with tamped topsoil... whatever came out of the hole.
I choose school bags by how many books I can fill in and it should be a back bag because I am comfortable with back bag than with body bags.