The answer will depend on whether the depth is 6 inches, 6 feet, 6 yards or 6 whatever. Since you have not bothered to provide that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
___________________________________________________
Assuming 6 feet deep
Then 1 yard = 3 feet
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet
Answer = 900 x 6 /27 = 200 cubic yards
12 " x 12 " = 1 foot by 1 foot = 1 sq foot. 900 / 1 = 900 tiles are needed (plus waste).
2700 x 4/12 = 900 cu ft 27 cu ft = 1 cu yard 900/27 = 33.33 cu yds
There are 900 ones in 900.
900 of them.
A 900 sq foot area will have a 30 ft side (Sqrt(900)=30) So given that 16 inches = 1.333 feet # tiles on edge = 30/1.333 = 22.5 22.5^2 = 507 tiles
how thick are you pouring? i will assume 900 sq. was just width by length. need to multiply by thickness inches to give cubic feet needed. divide that number by 27. this should be yards of concrete needed. my guess little over 4.4 cubes. don't forget to factor humidity. na
To calculate the amount of concrete needed for a 900 square foot area, you first need to determine the thickness of the concrete slab. Once you have the thickness in inches, divide it by 36 to convert to yards. Then divide the total cubic yards by the number of cubic yards in a concrete truck to determine how many truckloads you need.
200 feet wide x 900 feet deep is 4.132 acres.
16x8=128 900/128=7.01 and some 5hit so yeah the answer is 7
900 million tons
Aud the Deep-Minded died in 900.
900 - 1575.
About 900.
12 " x 12 " = 1 foot by 1 foot = 1 sq foot. 900 / 1 = 900 tiles are needed (plus waste).
You need 100 cubic yards for every 3-ft deep you want to spread it.
900
For 600 square feet, 2 pounds of fertilizer is needed. To find out how many pounds are needed for 900 square feet, calculate the ratio: 2 pounds / 600 square feet = x pounds / 900 square feet. Cross-multiply to find x, the pounds of fertilizer needed for 900 square feet.