To calculate the volume of a 2x2x2 hole, you multiply the dimensions together: 2 feet × 2 feet × 2 feet, which equals 8 cubic feet. Therefore, you would need 8 cubic feet of concrete to fill the hole completely.
I use one bag to 1 1/2 bags per hole and fill the rest of the way back with tamped topsoil... whatever came out of the hole.
To fill a 2'x2'x4' square hole, you first calculate the volume in cubic feet. The volume is 2 ft x 2 ft x 4 ft = 16 cubic feet. Therefore, you would need 16 cubic feet of concrete to fill the hole. If you need to convert this to cubic yards, it would be approximately 0.59 cubic yards, since there are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard.
1.042 CF of concrete per unit
42 cubic feet or 1.56 yards.
A standard 8x8x16 2 core block contains about .25cf of open space
There is no dirt. It's a hole.
A hole with two dimensions has no third dimension. → its volume is 6 ft × 10 in × 0 ft = 0 ft³ → You require NO concrete to fill a hole which is given as an area as it has NO volume.
Depends on the length of the hole.
17.5 cubic feet or about 3/4 of 1 cubic yard.
18.6240 yd³
about 432 cubic inches
None, as a hole which is 6 inches wide and 42 inches long has no depth and thus no volume.
How much concrete is required to fill 100 cu feet
I use one bag to 1 1/2 bags per hole and fill the rest of the way back with tamped topsoil... whatever came out of the hole.
Fill it till it runs out of the fill hole. Again that's the FILL HOLE, not the DRAIN HOLE. They are separate.
(0.45/2)2 x pi x 2 = 1/3rd of a cubic meter
how much 1" rock will I need to fill in a hole 20' long, 2' wide' and about 2' deep