.936 cubic feet
There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard, and a 60-pound bag of cement typically yields about 0.45 cubic feet when mixed. To fill one cubic yard, you would need approximately 60 bags of 60-pound cement.
To calculate the volume of cement slurry needed to fill a 12-inch diameter well that is 1400 feet deep, first determine the volume of the well in cubic feet. The formula for the volume of a cylinder is V = πr²h. The radius (r) is 6 inches (0.5 feet), and the height (h) is 1400 feet, resulting in a volume of approximately 1318.69 cubic feet. Converting this volume to barrels (1 barrel = 5.615 cubic feet) gives about 235 barrels of cement slurry required to fill the well.
There are nine cubic feet in one cubic yard, so: 10 X 6 X 1.5 / 9 = 10.
1 50kg bag fill about 2 cubic f. so for 102cu.f. you'll need 51 bags
It takes 59.84 gallons to fill eight cubic feet.
To calculate the volume of cement slurry needed to fill a 15-inch diameter well that is 1800 feet deep, first determine the volume of the well using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: ( V = \pi r^2 h ). The radius (r) is 7.5 inches (or 0.625 feet), and the height (h) is 1800 feet. The volume calculates to approximately 8,413 cubic feet, which converts to about 63,000 barrels of cement slurry (using 1 barrel = 5.61 cubic feet).
To calculate the number of barrels of cement slurry needed to fill a 15-inch diameter well that is 1800 feet deep, first, we find the volume of the well. The volume (V) can be calculated using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr²h, where r is the radius (7.5 inches or 0.625 feet) and h is the height (1800 feet). This results in a volume of approximately 7,068 cubic feet. Since a standard barrel of cement slurry is about 5.61 cubic feet, you would need around 1,260 barrels to fill the well.
40 cubic feet.
37.33 cubic feet
27
1,815 cubic feet = 13,577.14 gallons (rounded)
Dependes on the volume of your barrel. > Radius (r) = 8.5 / 12 = 0.7083333 . . . feet > The volume of the well = pi * r * r * l = 2364.375 cubic feet > Divide 2364.375 by your barrel volume in cubic feet, this = number of barrels.