23.41 sq m
Technically, none. A square foot is a measure of area whereas it is the volume of water that is required. To convert from area to volume it is necessary to know the depth. A twelfth of a cubic foot will cover an area of one square foot to a depth of 1 inch. A cubic foot will cover it to a depth of 1 foot, 100 cubic feet will cover it to a depth of 100 feet.
77/9 cubic yards for every inch of depth.
The area that 40 pounds of sand will cover at a depth of 1 inch can be estimated based on the density of sand, which is typically around 100 pounds per cubic foot. Since 40 pounds of sand is about 0.4 cubic feet, and 1 inch is ( \frac{1}{12} ) of a foot, the area covered would be approximately 4.8 square feet. Therefore, 40 pounds of sand will cover roughly 4.8 square feet at a depth of 1 inch.
5,184 2-square-inch tiles are needed.
A square foot will cover a square foot, regardless of the depth of the material the cover is made of.
1 inch = 2.54 centimeters = 0.0254 meter2 inches = (2 x 0.0254) = 0.0508 meterVolume = (area) x (depth) = 1,400 x 0.0508 = 71.12cubic meters
23.41 sq m
9.26 cubic yards for every inch of depth.
Here's the formula: 27 cubic feet = 1 cubic yard. 1 cubic yard will cover 324 square feet at a depth of 1 inch. 2000 square feet divided by 324 square feet = 6.2 yards (rounded). Another approach: 7 cubic yard X 324 square feet = 2268 square feet of coverage at a depth of 1 inch.
It depends to what depth. One cubic INCH will cover 400 square feet in sandstone dust but it will be only 0.00002 inches deep!
Technically, none. A square foot is a measure of area whereas it is the volume of water that is required. To convert from area to volume it is necessary to know the depth. A twelfth of a cubic foot will cover an area of one square foot to a depth of 1 inch. A cubic foot will cover it to a depth of 1 foot, 100 cubic feet will cover it to a depth of 100 feet.
77/9 cubic yards for every inch of depth.
The water pressure at a depth of 400 meters is approximately 40 atmospheres or around 588 pounds per square inch (psi). This is due to the weight of the water above pressing down on the water at that depth.
To convert inches to meters, divide by 39.37 (since 1 inch = 0.0254 meters). For a 6.0 x 9.0 inch rectangle, the area is (6.0 \times 9.0 = 54.0 \text{ square inches}). Converting this to square meters gives you (54.0 \div 1550 = 0.0348 \text{ square meters}).
The area that 40 pounds of sand will cover at a depth of 1 inch can be estimated based on the density of sand, which is typically around 100 pounds per cubic foot. Since 40 pounds of sand is about 0.4 cubic feet, and 1 inch is ( \frac{1}{12} ) of a foot, the area covered would be approximately 4.8 square feet. Therefore, 40 pounds of sand will cover roughly 4.8 square feet at a depth of 1 inch.
1 square inch is 0.00064516 square meters. 1 square meter is 1550.0031 square inches.