6 lbs
80 (cubic feet) = 2.96 cubic yards.
there are 27 cubic feet in one cubic yard.
First, let's start by converting yards into feet. There are 3 feet in 1 yard, so 80 cubic yards is then equal to 240 cubic feet. We get this by multiplying 80 by 3. Now that we have equal units, we can find how many 7 cubic feet go into an 80 cubic yard box by doing 240 cubic feet divided by 7 cubic feet, and the answer we get is a decimal: 34.2857143. If we are going to round, we must round down if it is a matter of fitting into a box because if there is more than the decimal answer that we got, not all of it will be able to fit. Therefore, items of 7 cubic feet can fit into an 80 cubic yard box 34 times.
4 inches = 1/3 foot27 cubic feet = 1 cubic yardVolume = 80 x 1/3 = 80/3 cubic feet = 80/81cubic yard = about 0.987654321 (really!)
To fill a 30-gallon drum with concrete, you would need approximately 12 bags of 80-pound concrete. This is based on the fact that one 80-pound bag of concrete yields about 0.6 cubic feet, and a 30-gallon drum holds about 4 cubic feet. Therefore, dividing 4 cubic feet by 0.6 cubic feet per bag gives you roughly 6.67 bags, but accounting for the weight and settling, it's safer to estimate around 12 bags.
The plural of foot is feet, not foots!There need not be any water in the container.80 cubic feet = 2265 litres, approx.
80 lbs per cubic foot
About 25 cubic feet, or almost one cubic yard. Road salt weighs 80 pounds per cubic foot
Volume = pi*7.52*80 = 14137.167 cubic feet to 3 d.p.
We know that cubic feet and pounds can't convert to each other, because wehave never, ever, heard a person say "I weigh xxx cubic feet". Also, no matterhow confusing the size and unit pricing of consumer goods gets, you have never,ever, seen a little sign over a bin in the produce section in the supermarket thatsays "$2.49 per cubic foot".They don't convert."Cubic feet" tells you how much space there is in the box. "Pounds" tells youthe weight of the box and whatever is in it.Take three identical boxes, each with the same number of 'cubic feet' in it. Fillone with air, one with jello, and one with stones. Each one will weigh different'pounds'.
A "yard" is actually a cubic yard and contains 27 cubic feet (3X3X3=27). To find the volume of your area, multiply length times width, times height (or depth). 250X80X8=160,000 cubic feet. Divide that by 27 and you get approximately 5925.9 cubic yards. If you want to know the weight of your fill, you will need to determine the specific composition of your dirt and then calculate the weight of a cubic foot or yard of it.
62.427 pounds is the weight 1 cu.ft. of very cold fresh water .