1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet = 54 half-cubic-foot bags
Twenty-one .75 cubic foot bags equal 16 cubic feet.
The number of bags in a cubic yard depends on the size of the bags being used. Typically, a cubic yard can fit around 13.5 regular-sized garbage bags with a capacity of 33-35 gallons. However, this may vary with larger or smaller bags.
The density of sand can vary, but a common value is around 1,600 kg/m^3. Assuming this density, 1 cubic meter of sand would weigh 1,600 kg. If a bag of sand typically weighs around 20 kg, you would need 80 bags of sand to fill 1 cubic meter.
1.5 divided by the volume of your bag in cubic yards. 40.5 divided by the volume of your bag in cubic feet.
The number of bags of rocks in 12.25 cubic feet will depend on the size and weight of the bags. To determine the number of bags, divide the total volume of rocks (12.25 cubic feet) by the volume of each bag.
Number of bags = 1/volume of gravel in each bag .
A cubic yard is 3x3x3= 27 cubic feet so you would need 27/.5 = 54 bags
A standard bag of pea gravel typically contains about 0.5 cubic feet of gravel. Since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, you would need approximately 54 bags of pea gravel to fill 1 cubic yard. However, it's always a good idea to check the specific volume listed on the bag, as sizes may vary.
To cover 100 square feet with gravel that is 1 inch thick, you first need to convert the thickness from inches to feet: 1 inch is 1/12 feet. Therefore, the volume of gravel required is 100 square feet × (1/12) feet = 8.33 cubic feet. If each bag of gravel is 0.05 cubic feet, you would need 8.33 cubic feet ÷ 0.05 cubic feet per bag = 166.6 bags. Rounding up, you would need 167 bags of gravel.
The volume that needs to be filled is 132ft * 1.5in = 132ft*(1.5/12)ft=132ft*0.125ft=16.5 cubic feet of gravel needed. ---- 1 cubic foot is 1,728 cubic inches (12 in x 12 in x 12 in) The area described above is 28,512 cubic inches divided by 1,728 cubic inches or 16.5 cubic feet
I'm not sure you asked this correctly since a 24 cubic foot bag would be extremely large. You would only need 1 and 1/8 bags. If you meant 2.4 cubic feet bags, you would need 11.25 or 12 bags.
Figure about 1/2 cubic foot per 60 lb bag. The basic formula is to use equal amounts of cement, sand, and gravel. There are 27 cubic yards per cubic foot. It depends upon how thick you are planning to pour the concrete. For one foot thick, you would need 9 cubic feet of concrete. For 6" thick, you would need 4 1/2 cubic feet. I'll give you the answers for 1 ft thick and for 6" thick. For 1 foot thick, you need 9 cubic feet at 1/2 cubic foot per 60 lb bag equals 18-60 lb bags. That's six 60 lb bags of concrete, plus six 60 lb bags of sand, plus 360 lbs of gravel. For 6 inches thick, divide each of these by 2 to give 3-60 lb bags of concrete, 3-60 lb bags of sand, plus 180 lbs of gravel.
To determine how many bags of gravel you need, first calculate the area you plan to cover by multiplying the length and width. Then, decide on the depth of gravel you require, typically around 2-3 inches for a driveway or path. Convert these measurements into cubic feet and divide by the cubic feet per bag of gravel, which is usually around 0.5 cubic feet. This will give you the number of bags needed; always round up to account for spillage or settling.
14 .
It would obviously depend on how thickly you wanted to cover the surface, and how 'tall' a single unit of pea gravel was. You would need 736 bags per foot depth.
One cubic meter of concrete is equal to 1.308 cubic yards of concrete. If there are 5 1/2 bags of cement in 1 cubic yard of concrete, there would be 7.2 bags in 1 cubic meter of concrete. These are the 94 pound bags of portland cement or roughly 40kg bags so figure 8 bags total. Some will be left over
0.5 is one-half, it takes 2 of these to make one cubic foot.