3 cubic feet of it.
A hole with two dimensions has no third dimension. → its volume is 6 ft × 10 in × 0 ft = 0 ft³ → You require NO concrete to fill a hole which is given as an area as it has NO volume.
None! It's A freakin' hole!
12 ft x 10 ft x .333 ft (4 in) = 39.96 cu ft. You need enough concrete for 40 cubic ft.
1500 x 3 = 4500 cubed ft
If the hole is a square then there is 36 cubic feet of dirt in the hole.
A hole with two dimensions has no third dimension. → its volume is 6 ft × 10 in × 0 ft = 0 ft³ → You require NO concrete to fill a hole which is given as an area as it has NO volume.
There's no dirt in a hole.
None! It's A freakin' hole!
No. There is no dirt in a hole of any dimensions. It's a hole. D'oh....
None. Since it is a hole, there is no dirt in it. A hole, by definition, must be empty.
To fill a 2'x2'x4' square hole, you first calculate the volume in cubic feet. The volume is 2 ft x 2 ft x 4 ft = 16 cubic feet. Therefore, you would need 16 cubic feet of concrete to fill the hole. If you need to convert this to cubic yards, it would be approximately 0.59 cubic yards, since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard.
12 ft x 10 ft x .333 ft (4 in) = 39.96 cu ft. You need enough concrete for 40 cubic ft.
12 ft x 10 ft x .333 ft (4 in) = 39.96 cu ft. You need enough concrete for 40 cubic ft.
1500 x 3 = 4500 cubed ft
18ft3
there isn't any soil, a hole is a hole. if it had soil in it, it wouldn't be a hole would it.
27 cubic feet okay from hayesconcrete.com 81 sq ft is= 4 inches 54 sg ft is = 6 inches