Want this question answered?
The answer cannot be determined. To answer the question, assuming identical height boxes, we need to know the height of a box.
The answer depends on how many boxes in each layer. And since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
6
A one-inch stack would contain about 233 bills.
20 foot containers are generally 8 feet wide and 8.5 feet high. Taking that as the dimensions, you have 96 inches x 102 inches x 240 inches. 240/24 means 10 boxes can fit lengthwise. 96/18 and 102/18 mean you could fit 5 boxes wide and 5 boxes high, for a total of 5x5x10 = 250 boxes. You could also fit 4 boxes placing them lengthwise across the width (96/24). That would still stack 5 high, and then 240/18 = 13 boxes lengthwise. 4x5x13 = 260 boxes, so you could fit 10 more by stacking them that way.
The answer cannot be determined. To answer the question, assuming identical height boxes, we need to know the height of a box.
12 boxes, if you do not stack the boxes.
none its a werehouse
The answer depends on how many boxes in each layer. And since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
6
825,305 of them.
Historically a stack of paper would be up to the ceiling - so how high is the ceiling?
A one-inch stack would contain about 233 bills.
24 cubes would be it.
answer is 97
5+5
The British One Pound coin is 3.15mm thick, so 317 or 318 coins should make a metre high stack.