My suggestion is not to buy fill dirt but to go to a local construction site and pick some up there. Waste dirt is usually left over from leveling the land to build. A foreman/site manager might just let you have all the dirt you would like.
We need to know "remove it" from what. Also what kind of "dirt", hard packed gravel, topsoils, sand etc.
1 penny for the earth
More info needed. How much does 0.4 cubic feet of what weigh? Air? Lead? Water? Dirt?
36,000 pounds, aprox 20 cubic yds. 20 cubic yards spread out at 2 inches will cover 3200 square feet. hope that helps.
Theoretically, none. The amount of dirt excavated to create such a hole would be 1 cubic metre. However, excavated dirt (depending on the nature of the dirt) can increase in mass by up to a third the original size. That is why when you dig a big hole then fill it in (getting all the dirt back) the hole is raised on top not flat.
None, if you dug the hole, you emptied it of 162 square feet of dirt, so put it back.
1 penny for the earth
1,728 cubic inches of it
300 cubic feet of dirt
AnswerNothing.... (no dirt in a hole)Answer1800 lbsSize of hole = 3 x 3 x 2 = 18 cubic feet, x 100 lbs per cubic foot = 1800 lbsAnswerIf there is dirt in the hole, it would remove the hole, so there is no real answer to this. You could ask "If dirt is 100 lbs per cubic foot, what is the weight of 18 cubic feet?", to which the answer is 18*100=1800 lbs... Have fun!
29,040 cubic feet of dirt.
30 cubic feet of dirt have been removed,and no dirt remains in the hole.
The answer will depend on the depth to which the dirt is spread.
If the hole is a square then there is 36 cubic feet of dirt in the hole.
There's no dirt in a hole.
8ft*6ft*10in 96in*72in*10in 960sqin*72in 69120 cubic inches of dirt or 5760 cubic feet of dirt.
There would be no dirt in a hole, but the hole would fit 30 cubic feet.
More info needed. How much does 0.4 cubic feet of what weigh? Air? Lead? Water? Dirt?