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you put the quad or the dirt bike or whatever you have on a trailer or the bed of your truck and drive to the race
1/2
if you convert every unit to yards, to find the volume it would be (12/3)(6/3)(2/3). 12/3=4, 6/3=2, 4(2)=8. 8(2/3)=16/3 or 5.33 cubic yards
you put the dirt down first and then the slug
It depends on the size of the tractor trailer. Find the dimensions of the trailer and divide it by 16 cubic units.
the common rule is to put it back from center 1" for every foot of trailer length this is so you can have some tongue weight on the trailer.
Two yards is six feet, three yards is nine feet, one yard is three feet. So your "hole" is 6 by 9 by 3 cubic feet. That is 162 cubic feet of "hole". That is the simple answer. The junior high school answer. But if you are asking this for real then that is a whole different matter. If you actually dug it out in dry dirt, you'd get about three times the effective volume of dirt. Your hole would "contain" 162 cubic feet of air ! But your pile of dirt would need about 500 cubic feet of truck space to carry it away, because it would be bulked up by the act of undigging it ! In the ground it is packed together, once you put a spade to it then it gets loose and the volume increases about 3 times.
A trailer is probably something the creator put on there to get the audiences' attention or it is something he/she put on there to tell you why you're are playing that game.
Yes, it is very simple all u do is put a little dirt in the cup put a seed in the dirt then put more dirt over it then u water it.
Yes! i have towed many times with a Honda Element. The real issue is weight though and I would not put more then 1000lbs in that trailer.
You put the dirt in the water, then you make a hoe and use it on the dirt
The homophone for "to put in ground and covered with dirt" is "bury."