A volume of 700 cubic feet would be equivalent to a cube-shaped space with each side measuring approximately 8.5 feet in length. To visualize this, imagine a room where the ceiling is 8.5 feet high, and the length and width of the room are also 8.5 feet. This would give you a total volume of 700 cubic feet.
A UPS delivery truck (common type) has 700 cubic feet of cargo space.
The inside of a 6-9 passenger jet has the same.
5 Cadillac Escalades contain cumulatively 700 cubic feet of storage space.
This is a volume of 11.9 million (11,900,000) cubic feet.
24.72 cubic feet per minute at 700 liters per minute.
700 sq ft * 1/12 ft = 700/12 cubic feet = 58.33... cubic ft or 2.16 cu yards.
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet700 square feet x 1/2 foot = 350 cubic feet = 1226/27 cubic yards(12.963 cubic yards, rounded)
12 inches = (exactly) 1 foot. Therefore, the volume in cubic feet is 700 X 12 = 8,400. There are (exactly) 27 cubic feet per cubic yard, so that the volume in cubic yards = 8,400/27 = 3.1 X 102, to the justified number of significant digits (limited by 12).
700 cubic feet for every minute it runs.
700 liters of water weighs approximately 700 kilograms, as the density of water is about 1 kg/liter.
1 yard = 3 feet 1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet 1 inch = 1/12 feet Then: Square feet = (100 x 27)/ ( 2 x 1/12) = 2700 x 6 =16200 sq feet
you've given volume dimensions for a rectangular prism of 700 cubic feet. It's surface area would be 480 square feet.
one cubic foot is 6.229 Imperial gallons or 7.481 US gallons 700/6.229 = 112.377589 cubic feet per minute for Imperial 700/7.481 = 93.570378 cubic feet per minute for US total cubic feet of sediment basin = 20*60*8 = 9600 so 9600/112.377589 = 85.426285 minutes for the Imperial gallon or 1 hour and 25.426 minutes and 9600/93.570378 = 102.596572 minutes for the US gallon or 1 hour and 42.597 minutes
About 6-7 cubic feet of sand is typically required for every 1 cubic foot of brick masonry. Therefore, for 100 cubic feet of brick masonry, you would need approximately 600-700 cubic feet of sand.
700 cft (a terrible way to write cubic feet, or ft^3) is a volume...and amount of space that something takes up. It's not a weight.