The room is 6480 cubic feet. If 192 tennis balls fit in (3 feet) cubed, that's 27 cubic feet and 46,080 tennis balls fit in 6480 cubic feet.
Assuming fit is meant to be feet, the answer is 0.0033 feet, approx.
You can fit six of them.
How many cubes fit will depend on the size of each cube.
3.6 feet (not fit!) equals 43.2 inches
A standard pallet is 48" x 40" . You should be able to fit 24 skids in a 48 foot trailer. There are ways to get more.
Yes, If load the pallets sideways and double stack them you can fit 60 pallets on a 53' trailer
450
The number of bales that can fit onto a semi will depend on the width and length of the semi's trailer and the overall cubic feet of each bale. A standard semi trailer in North America can be 8 feet to 8 feet 6 inches wide by 13 feet 6 inches high and anywhere from 28 to 53 feet long. Small square hay bales are usually 5.25 to 6 cubic feet. So if multiple the height by width, by length, you'll get the cubic feet of the trailer, you then divide that number by the cubic feet of the hay bales to figure out how many will fit in each size of trailer.
26 skids (standard 40x48) side by side total. if you are willing to load pallet side way you can load up to 30 pallets. Assuming all pallets are not stackable.
About 40,000 pounds worth, which is enough to fill a 53-foot trailer to about three feet deep. It would be silly to use a 53-foot trailer for a load like that, so they'd use a short trailer.
To determine how many pallets fit in a 28-foot pup trailer, we need to consider several factors: Dimensions of the trailer: A 28-foot pup trailer typically has internal dimensions of approximately 28 feet long, 8 feet wide, and 9 feet high. Standard pallet size: The most common pallet size in North America is 48 inches by 40 inches. Pallet placement options: Single-stacked: If the pallets are placed only on the floor of the trailer, the number depends on how you orient them and if they are stacked. Double-stacked: If the pallets are double-stacked, you can fit more pallets by utilizing the vertical space. Calculating capacity: Lengthwise (48" side facing forward): Each pallet is 4 feet long, and the trailer is 28 feet long, so you can fit 28/4=7 pallets lengthwise. Widthwise (40" side across the trailer width): Each pallet is 3.33 feet wide, and the trailer is 8 feet wide, so you can fit 8/3.33 ≈2 pallets across. Total pallets: Single-stacked: You can fit 7×2=14 pallets in a single layer. Double-stacked: You can fit 14×2=28 pallets if double-stacked. Thus, you can fit 14 pallets single-stacked or 28 pallets double-stacked in a 28-foot pup trailer, assuming standard pallet dimensions and no additional constraints.
About 57,000 cartons of cigarettes can fit on a 53' tractor trailer.
depends hob big the trailer is
Let's do the math first. One 3x3x8 (obviously large square bale) is equivalent to 72 cubic feet. The length of the trailer would be 48 ft., width would probably be around 8 feet since it's that attached to a semi truck (the number is estimated though, you'll have to measure the width yourself), and bales would be probably be stacked around 9 feet high. That is 48 x 8 x 9 feet = 3456 cubic feet. To find the number of bales that can be fit on the trailer, divide the trailer dimensions by the large square bale dimensions: 3456/72 = 48 bales. Thus, 48 large square bales (plus or minus, depending on how high you want to stack them) would fit on a 48 ft flat-bed semi-trailer.
No.
28