Concrete is reckoned by the cubic yard. But the hole mentioned only has two dimensions given - so I have to make an assumption, that it is an 84 inch deep round hole whose diameter is 24 inches. If this is the case, I work out the volume of the hole like this: volume of cylinder is pi times diameter times diameter times depth divided by four. 24 inch = 0.67 yard 84 inch = 2.33 yard So the volume is 3.14 X 0.67 X 0.67 X 2.33 / 4 cubic yards = 0.815 cubic yards. /BrianW
.99 yds
Depends on the length of the hole.
How deep? 1 inch will take .7 yards
A yard (of dirt or concrete) is a volume of 1 cubic yard (1 yd)³, as the cubic is assumed in this context. Assuming a circle 7 feet across (diameter), then the radius is 3.5 feet = 1.16667 yards, and 8 inches = 0.2222 yards. So the volume of this is about 0.95 cubic yards. In concrete jargon it would be 0.95 yards.
You can't express a volume of concrete in yards.
532.4074 yards of concrete, round up to 533 yards.
It depends on how deep the concrete. 600 sq ft at 6 inch deep is 300 cu ft = 11.1 yards. 12 inch deep is 22,2 yards; 4 inch deep is 5.5 yards
A 14'x14'x4" inch slab will require 2.42 cubic yards of cement.
2.2469 cubic yards for each inch of depth.
3 yards. 1 yard is a cubic (not square) yard and is 36 inches on all three sides. The calculation looks like this: (216x216x3)/(36x36x36)=3.0
123.44 cubic yards
For a 4-inch depth: 4.75 cubic yards. For a 6-inch depth: 7.1 cubic yards.