How many tons of lime stone is needed to build a wall 6 ft high 936 sq ft
We can't determine the amount of tons of stone to fill up that area or volume! Tons measure mass while ft² measures area. Therefore, these units are incompatible to each other.
To determine how many 5x9 stones are needed to cover 108 square feet, first calculate the area of one stone. The area of a 5x9 stone is 5 ft × 9 ft = 45 sq ft. Next, divide the total area to be covered by the area of one stone: 108 sq ft ÷ 45 sq ft = 2.4. Since you can't have a fraction of a stone, you would need 3 stones to cover the area completely.
There are many variables but 3 tons of air conditioning is enough to cover 1750 sq ft.
1 ton of rock covers apx. 80sq ft 3" thick. 5 x 80 = 400sg ft
5760 cubic feet of stone.
We can't determine the amount of tons of stone to fill up that area or volume! Tons measure mass while ft² measures area. Therefore, these units are incompatible to each other.
At 12" depth, 20 tons of gravel will cover 360 sq ft.
There are many variables but 3 tons of air conditioning is enough to cover 1750 sq ft.
1 ton of rock covers apx. 80sq ft 3" thick. 5 x 80 = 400sg ft
5760 cubic feet of stone.
"4 inches" is a length. "7676 square feet" is an area. "4 inches by 7676 square feet" describes a volume, which is equal to 2,558.67 cubic feet. (= 7676/3, because 4 in = 1/3 ft.) So your question is better put as "How many tons of crushed stone does it take to cover an area of 7676 square feet to a depth of 4 inches?" The answer depends on the density of the crushed stone. I can't answer that, but I've given your question a clearer phrasing.
9 tons
This qn can't be answered because flag stones vary both as to thickness and as to density.
4 ft and 90 pounds to 30 ft and 10 tons
8.75lbs
5 ft by 9 ft is 45 square feet. This requires 6,480 square inches to cover it.
To calculate the volume of stone needed, first convert the depth to feet (2 inches = 1/6 feet). Then multiply the area (21x10 = 210 square feet) by the depth (1/6 feet) to find the volume in cubic feet: 210 sq ft * 1/6 ft = 35 cubic feet of stone.