Depends on the density of the 'dirt'. Assuming densith of about twice that of water.
Water has a density of 62.4 lb/cu ft
5377.78 x 62.4 = A (weight of water)
A x 2 = weight of the dirt
This is in pounds so divide by 2000 to convert to tons.
4010.7 cubic feet.
You can measure the surface of the dirt in square yards. That would be nine square feet.However the volume or amount of dirt cannot be measured in square yards or square feet. The amount of dirt in a volume of one cubic yard would be 27 cubic feet. ( 3x3x3=27 )The amount of dirt in a square yard to a depth of 0.5 feet would be 4.5 cubic feet. (3x3x0.5=4.5)
4500 cubic feet of dirt will come out.
In volume terms the answer is 2X3X6 = 36 cubic feet. So, if there was a cubic square root of 6 feet long of dirt would be an answers of 36 cubic feet. If it was the amount told it would of been the same exact amount because all dirt is about 6 feet long of a hole.
There would be no dirt in a hole, but the hole would fit 30 cubic feet.
14 cubic feet = 0.518 cubic yards
192000
There is no dirt in a hole. If the hole is being dug, the amount of dirt being removed would be equal to the volume of the hole, which is 3 feet wide, 5 feet across, and 6 feet deep. So, the volume of dirt being removed would be 3 x 5 x 6 = 90 cubic feet.
None. It's a hole. 162 cubic feet of air. There is no dirt in a hole.
When a person speaks of a 'yard' of dirt, sand, cement or similar material, they actually mean a 'cubic yard'. A yard is a measurement of length. A cubic yard is a measurement of volume.60 (cubic) yards of dirt is the equivalent of 1,620 cubic feet of dirt.One cubic yard is measured as an amount that is 3 feet wide x 3 feet long x 3 feet high, or 27 cubic feet.60 cubic yards equals 27 cubic feet x 60, which equals 1,620 cubic feet.If you spread 60 cubic yards of dirt one foot thick you'd have an area of 1,620 square feet.If you spread this dirt 6 inches thick you'd have an area of 3,240 square feet.
27
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