Multiply the length times the height. That gives you the area of a cross section of the tank- (96). Now divide the volume (960) by the area (96) and that tells you the width of the tank.
Multiply length by width by height to find the volume in a cubic unit of measurement. For example, to find the volume of a box that is 2 feet long, 2 feet wide and 3 feet high, 2x2x3=12 cubic feet.
Volume = (length) x (width) x (height) = 16' x 7' x 5' = 560 cubic feet.
The volume of such a room is 480 cubic feet.
cubic feet is not a measure of height, but instead is volume. If you have a cube that is 2 feet long on each side, the volume is 2X2X2 = 8 cubic feet.
The volume of a cylinder with a radius of 2 inches by 4 feet high is: 0.349 cubic feet.
Multiply length by width by height to find the volume in a cubic unit of measurement. For example, to find the volume of a box that is 2 feet long, 2 feet wide and 3 feet high, 2x2x3=12 cubic feet.
The volume of a cuboid is length * width * height So, volume = 5*5*10 = 250 cubic feet.
If the length of a thing is multiplied by its width we get square feet (area). If that is then multiplied by the height of it we get cubic feet (volume). If something is 16 feet wide, 13 feet high and 32 feet long it's volume is 16 x 13 x 32 = 6,656 cubic feet
The volume of a 10ft container depends on its dimensions (length, width, and height). To calculate the volume, you would multiply the length by the width by the height. For example, if the container is 10ft long, 8ft wide, and 8ft high, the volume would be 640 cubic feet (10ft x 8ft x 8ft = 640 cubic feet).
Volume = (length) x (width) x (height)Height = (volume) / (length x width) = (3000) / (96 x 2.5) = 12.5 ft
It is: 8*3*5 = 120 cubic feet
4200 cubic feet
Volume = Height x Length x Width 91 inches x 112 inches x 60 inches = 611,520 cubic inches. This large a volume is usually converted to cubic feet or cubic yards. 611520 cubic inches = 611520/1728 cubic feet = 353.89 cubic feet 611520 cubic inches = 611520/46656 cubic yards = 13.1 cubic yards
The volume of a theater stage is determined by its dimensions: length, width, and height. To calculate the volume, you multiply these three measurements together (Volume = Length x Width x Height). For example, if a stage is 30 feet long, 20 feet wide, and 5 feet high, its volume would be 3,000 cubic feet. The specific volume can vary greatly depending on the design and size of the stage.
Volume of greenhouse: 30*20*8 = 4800 cubic feet
Volume = (length) x (width) x (height) = 16' x 7' x 5' = 560 cubic feet.
It depends on how thick each square foot is! Actually, a square foot isn't "thick" at all, so you could theoretically stack up an infinite number of them and still not reach the one foot high you would need to make a cubic foot. (cubic feet) = (square feet) × (height in feet)