That depends upon how much food you need to store in it, which in turn is related both to your dietary choices and your shopping frequency. If you shop every day (which some people do) then you can get by with a very small refrigerator.
The 25.3 cubic feet refers to the inside of the refrigerator. You need to measure the height, width, and depth of the outside of the refrigerator to know if you have enough space for the refrigerator.
You need another measurement to make it cubic.
32 cubic feet=4x8x1 27cubic feet in a cubic yard You will need a yard plus 5 cubic feet.
You need 3 figures to get cubic feet.
You need six cubic feet of aggregate!You need six cubic feet of aggregate!You need six cubic feet of aggregate!You need six cubic feet of aggregate!
A minimum of 11.8 (11.7639) cubic feet.
The third digit after the period in the model number designates the cubic feet of a refrigerator. Your third digit is a 4 which designates a 14 or 24 cubic feet. Since Sears didn't make a 14 cubic feet side by side refrigerator, your refrigerator has to be a 24 cubic feet box. Your refrigerator is 24 cubic feet. OR... Empty your refrigerator of all the items inside. Take out the food, remove drawers and shelves.Step 2 Refer to the image below. Measure the height, width and depth of the refrigerator's interior. Do the measurements in inches, and write down each measurement as you go along.Step 3 Now multiply those measurements together as such: H (height) x W (width) x D (depth). For example, if your measurements were:Height = 48 inchesWidth = 36 inchesDepth = 12 inchesYour equation would be 48 x 36 x 12 = 20,736Step 4 This is the internal capacity of your refrigerator, but remember, we measured in inches. In our example, we've come up with a figure of 20,736 cubic inches. We need to change that to cubic feet. Simply divide the figure you came up with by 1,728--this converts cubic inches into cubic feet. In the case of our example, we come up with:20,736 /1,736 = 12The answer for our example is 12 cubic feet.Step 5 Use your figures and do the math.
To get cubic feet you will need a third dimension. Cubic feet implies length x width x height
201.6 cubic ft
24 feet X 24 feet X 1/3 feet = 192 cubic feet 192 cubic feet / 27 cubic feet per cubic yard = 7.11 cubic yards
You would need 48 cubic feet of corn.
The conversion is impossible.You need to know the density of your charcoal.