Let me get this clear - - -you want to FILL the pool with tile. It would take truck loads
If the 210 square ft area is a convenient shape, or if offcuts can be used to fill up odd parts then 53 tiles will suffice.
36 tiles. First you have to convert 20 inches to feet. There are 12 inches in a foot so 20/12 means you have one and two-thirds length tiles. Then, you have to figure out the lenght of the sides of the room which is the square root of 100 sq ft. which is 10 feet long. Now, you have to figure out how many tiles it will take to do one length of the room by 10/one and two-thirds which is 6 tiles. Finally you have to multiply the length times the width to get how many tiles it takes to fill the room by 6*6=36 tiles
gallons
You need three measurements, length, width, and depth, to calculate the volume of the pool
If the raised garden has dimensions of 5 x 5 x 1 then it requires 25 cubic feet of dirt to fill it.
It depends... how long, wide, and deep it is.
70
without knowing the actual lengths of the shallow and deep ends, nothing more than a very loose ballpark number is possible.
600x300x7mm tiles fill a 20 feet container?
It takes 108 tiles to fill a 3-foot by 4-foot rectangle how many tiles would it take to fill a 4-foot by 5-foot rectangle?
if it's 4 ft deep 21,139.948 gal.
The answer to your question is: 174.14 kiloliters.
The answer will depend on the size of the tiles!
1795 gallons, if you fill it to the brim.
all depends if your truck have a deep or shallow oil pan. usually is written in the oil fill tube. deep oil pan take 56 qts
What are your depths in the deep and shallow end and what shape is the pool? Rectangular, kidney, oval or irregular?
10,710. 10,710. The calculation for a rectangle pool is: ((Shallow end depth + deep end depth) / 2) * length * width) = pool volume in cubic feet Pool cubic feet * 7.5 = gallons of water the pool holds