That's going to depend on the shape of the container, especially on how much 'real estate'
the base of the container covers.
For discussion, imagine that the container is a square fish tank, and the four walls go straight up
from the four sides of the square base.
-- If the base of the tank covers 64 square feet and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water
in it is 1 foot deep.
-- If the base of the tank covers 1 acre and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water
in it is 0.0176 inch deep.
-- If the base of the tank covers 1 square inch and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water
in it is 9,216 feet (1.745 mile) deep.
64 cubic feet (43 = 64)
64 cubic feet.
78 feet
8 ft x 8 ft x 1 ft = 64 cubic feet
This is impossible to calculate without knowing the surface area of the pool.
64 cubic feet (43 = 64)
Volume = length * Width * Heigth
64 cubic feet.
A measure of volume in the Imperial system.
78 feet
4ft*4ft*4ft=64 cubic feet
You cant. Cubic feet has an extra dimension. Square feet=lengthxwidth Cubic feet=Lengthxwidthxheight i dont know if this is reliable or not... http://www.onlineconversion.com/faq_01.htm This is a nonsensical question. You must specify the Depth to which you are spreading material over the 64 sq ft. For example, 21.3 cu ft can be spread to a depth of 4 inches over 64 sq ft. Example calculation: 64 sq ft x(4/12) ft = 21.3 cu ft
The volume of a cube with a 4 foot edge is: 64 cubic feet.
8 ft x 8 ft x 1 ft = 64 cubic feet
This is impossible to calculate without knowing the surface area of the pool.
(1 cubic foot = 28.317 liters) Square feet is a measure of area, not volume as is liters if your cube was 4 * 4 * 4 feet = 64 cubic feet, this would = (64 * 28.317) 1812.3 liters
if a cube has a volume of 64 cubic units the edge will be 8because 8 times 8 = 64