{| width="309" | width="131" valign="top" | INSIDE LENGTH
INSIDE WIDTH
INSIDE HEIGHT
DOOR WIDTH
DOOR HEIGHT
CAPACITY
TARE WEIGHT
MAX. CARGO | width="6" valign="top" | | width="77" valign="top" | 39'5"
7'8"
8'10'
7'8"
8'5"
2,694 ft³
8,750 lb
58,450 lb | width="69" valign="top" | 12.01 m
2.33 m
2.69 m
2.33 m
2.56 m
76.28 m³
3,968 kg
26,512 kg |}
67.11 cubic meters The reasoning is: Length: 12.051m Width: 2.340m Height: 2.380m 12.051 x 2.340 x 2.380 = 67.11 cubic meters Drop roughly 5 cubic meters to be safe with your capacity if you are planning a shipment, as you cannot always fill up to the top.
A 40' NOR (Non-Operating Refrigerated) container typically has a volume capacity of around 67.7 cubic meters (cbm).
The volume of a cone 8 meters high with a base circumference of 40 meters is: 340 cubic meters.
It is difficult to provide an exact answer without knowing the dimensions of the teak wood being loaded in the container. However, a standard 40 ft container can typically hold around 67 cubic meters of cargo.
To figure the volume, you would need to know the height. The formula for volume is length X height X depth. Here is an example: Length: 12.051m Width: 2.340m Height: 2.380m 12.051 x 2.340 x 2.380 = 67.11 cubic meters Drop roughly 5 cubic meters to be safe with your capacity if you are planning a shipment, as you cannot always fill up to the top.
The CBM (cubic meter) of a 40-foot high cube (HC) container is approximately 76.4 cubic meters. This is calculated based on its standard dimensions, which are about 12.2 meters in length, 2.44 meters in width, and 2.89 meters in height. The higher ceiling allows for additional storage space compared to a standard 40-foot container.
This is not a valid conversion. Cubic meters is a measure of volume while square yards is a measure of area.
Volume = 40*8*8.5 cubic feet = 2720 cubic feet
A 40 feet container in meters is 12.192.
40 cubic meters
40 mm = 0.04 meters Volume = pi*0.042*3 = 0.0151 cubic meters rounded to 4 decimal places
According to APL's website (APL is a container supplier) a 40' container holds:standard steel container: 67.7 m3.high cube steel container (1ft higher than standard 40 ft container): 76.4 m3.