None it's a hole
3ft x 3ft x 1ft = 9 cubic feet of dirt will be needed.
To find out how much dirt it takes to fill a hole measuring 2 feet by 3 feet by 4 feet, you calculate the volume of the hole. The volume is found by multiplying the dimensions: 2 ft × 3 ft × 4 ft = 24 cubic feet. Therefore, it takes 24 cubic feet of dirt to fill the hole.
There is none. Because there is a hole! If you are asking how much dirt can fill the hole, then your answer is 27 cubic feet.
16*32*6 = 3072 cubic feet is needed
There is no dirt in the hole, hence the hole.
There is no dirt in a hole because a hole is defined by the absence of material, in this case dirt. If you were to fill the hole with dirt, it would require 24 cubic feet of dirt to completely fill it.
3ft x 3ft x 1ft = 9 cubic feet of dirt will be needed.
24 feet
The question cannot be answered in a sensible way. The size of the hole is given in only two dimensions - in all likelihood, that means the area that the hole covers but not how deep it is. The amount of dirt required to fill the hole will depend on the depth of the hole as well.
To calculate the volume of a hole that is 6 feet long, 6 feet wide, and 6 feet deep, you multiply the dimensions: 6 ft x 6 ft x 6 ft = 216 cubic feet. Since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, you divide 216 by 27, resulting in 8 cubic yards of dirt needed to fill the hole.
There is none. Because there is a hole! If you are asking how much dirt can fill the hole, then your answer is 27 cubic feet.
16*32*6 = 3072 cubic feet is needed
Assuming a rectangular (3-D) shape, multiply the three numbers. The answer will be in cubic feet.
There is no dirt in the hole, hence the hole.
There is NO dirt, it is a hole! If you want to fill it with dirt, that is 4x6x12=288 cubic feet, weighing about 28,800 pounds
There is no dirt. It's a hole.
To fill a hole 2 feet long, 4 feet wide, and 6 feet deep would take 48 (2 x 4 x 6) cubic feet of dirt.