The area of the garden is 9 x 4= 36 ft2, so the volume of dirt you need would be length x width x depth. Since you didn't say what the depth was, the number of bags of dirt, which is equal to the volume you want to fill in cubic feet is just 36 x the depth you want to fill with dirt. If you only want to have about a 2 inch layer of dirt all over your garden, you need 36 ft2 x 1/6 ft = 6 cubic feet = 6 bags of dirt. Good luck!
There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard. So, if you have 1 cubic yard of dirt, it is equivalent to 27 cubic feet of dirt.
A cubic yard is 3x3x3= 27 cubic feet so you would need 27/.5 = 54 bags
The volume of a cylinder is calculated using the formula V = πr^2h, where r is the radius and h is the height. In this case, the radius (half the diameter) is 2.5 feet. So, the volume of the raised garden would be V = π(2.5)^2(1) = 6.25π cubic feet, approximately 19.63 cubic feet.
To calculate the cubic weight of dirt, you need to know the density of the dirt. Let's assume the density of the dirt is 100 pounds per cubic foot. Multiply the volume (1920 cubic feet) by the density (100 pounds per cubic foot) to get the total weight. Therefore, the cubic weight of dirt for 1920 cubic feet would be 192,000 pounds.
You would need 54 bags of 0.5 cubic feet pea gravel to equal 1 cubic yard.
14 cubic feet = 0.518 cubic yards
Twenty-one .75 cubic foot bags equal 16 cubic feet.
The formula for the volume is length * height * depth (or width) = 33 =3*3*3 = 27 cubic feet, but the answer to the question is 0; there's no dirt in a hole... We are not digging a hole here; we are building a mini-mastaba that is 1 foot deep above the original ground level. 48 cubic feet of dirt is required which equals 48/27 = 1.78 cubic yards of dirt.
There are 189 cubic feet in 7 yards of dirt. This can be calculated by multiplying the number of cubic yards by 27, since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard.
If you are trying to figure out the 40lb bags of dirt they sell at the store... It takes about 50 of those to equal 1 (cubic) yard of dirt. I just had to do the research on it too. there are 3 feet in a yard so i figure cubic feet and cubic yard would be the same principle. 1 1/2 bags would seem right.
One cubic yard is equivalent to 27 cubic feet. A 60-pound bag of Quikrete typically yields about 0.45 cubic feet of concrete. Therefore, to fill one cubic yard, you would need approximately 60 bags of 60-pound Quikrete bags (27 cubic feet ÷ 0.45 cubic feet per bag = 60 bags).
To determine how many 40 lb bags of topsoil are needed to cover 12 cubic yards, first convert cubic yards to cubic feet. There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, so 12 cubic yards equals 324 cubic feet. Assuming a 40 lb bag covers about 1.5 cubic feet, you would need approximately 216 bags (324 cubic feet ÷ 1.5 cubic feet per bag = 216).