30.81 cubic yards
1 cubic yard covers 324 square feet per inch of thickness, divide 324 by thickness in inches to get coverage, i.e. 4 inches thick would cover 324/4=81 square feet, 36 inches thick would cover (you guessed it) 9 square feet.
A pad that is 4 inches think covers 80ish sq ft per yard, so 8 inch would be 40ish sq ft per yard of concrete
(10x16)/3 =53.3 cu ft 53.3/27=2 cu yards
If your talking about 4'x4'x4" thick it will take about 12 bags. Most 60# bags will do .45 cubic feet and that slab would be about 5.3 cubic feet wich equals 11.77 bags.. Mike
To calculate the number of 80-pound bags of concrete needed for a 2x2 slab that is 6 inches thick, first determine the volume of the slab. The volume is 2 feet x 2 feet x 0.5 feet (6 inches) = 2 cubic feet. An 80-pound bag of concrete typically yields about 0.6 cubic feet. Therefore, you would need approximately 4 bags (2 cubic feet ÷ 0.6 cubic feet per bag = about 3.33 bags, rounded up to 4).
8.25 cubic yards of concrete
Depends on how thick it is. At 4 inches thick, you would nee about 5.5 cubic yards adjusting for safety. At 6 inches, you'd need about 8 cubic yards. You can play with different thicknesses with the linked concrete pad calculator.
151/9 cubic yards for every 12 inches thick
1 cubic yard covers 324 square feet per inch of thickness, divide 324 by thickness in inches to get coverage, i.e. 4 inches thick would cover 324/4=81 square feet, 36 inches thick would cover (you guessed it) 9 square feet.
If you made a sidewalk about 2.5' wide it would be about 13' long.
A pad that is 4 inches think covers 80ish sq ft per yard, so 8 inch would be 40ish sq ft per yard of concrete
It depends on the thickness and the density. One ton should be about 15 cubic feet when compacted, so it would cover 30 square feet 6 inches thick or 45 square feet 4 inches thick or 60 square feet 3 inches thick. It would make a driveway four inches thick, 9 feet wide and 5 feet long or a footpath 3 inches thick, three feet wide and 20 feet long.
It is all dependant on how thick the concrete is. You take the square footage and turn that into cubed feet (where the thickness comes in) if its 1" thick you multiply the square footage by.083, if its 2" thick you multiply by.17. To come up with this number you take the thickness say 3" and divide that by 12 (12 inches in a foot), so for 3 inches you get .25. So back to the question at hand, say your 30 square feet of concrete is 6 inches thick, your equation would look like this: 30 X .5 = 15. So 15 is your cubed footage. You then multiply this number by 150 which is the weight in pounds of 1 cubic foot of concrete. The number you come up with is 2,250. That is the amount in pounds of your 30 square feet of concrete assuming it is 6 inches thick.
For a 1000 sqft slab with a thickness of 4 inches, you would need approximately 33 cubic meters of concrete. This calculation is based on the assumption that 1 cubic yard of concrete covers 81 square feet at 4 inches thick.
387 cubic feet. This is because 43x18x0.5 (as six inches is 1/2 of a foot) =387.
To my knowledge, concrete is measured in cubic yards. you would convert your measurements to yards 2000 sq ft is about 222.22 sq yards 4 inches is about 0.11 yards multiply to get volume, about 24.7 cu yards
.1250 inches or 3.18 mm