Consolidated Builders here
I would assume about 40 yards+. If anyone wants my free concrete calculator, email me
it wont paste right on this blog but here it is
Concretecostwidth40length40thick "8Yards=39.506174,345.68Stone=29.62963444.44Wire rolls=2.133333298.67Forms LF=16884.00Total=5,172.79
www.consolidatedbuilders.org
What you need to do first is to check if you have that room near the threshold of the door for that extra concrete(which is minimum of 3.5" inches) then you need to remove the top surface of the old concrete to be rough surface don't break too much just about an 1"wash clean and let it dry and only then to install the new concrete.
Well, you make a sidewalk from concrete, not just cement. Concrete consists of cement, sand, gravel and water. You will need 5.5 cubic feet of concrete. A standard sidewalk grade of concrete would be 1 part cement, 2 parts sand, 3 parts gravel- so the sidewalk needs 0.91 cu ft of cement- about 87 pounds worth- plus sand and gravel. If you want to buy the premixed bags of concrete (like Sacrete), you will need about 17 of the 40 pounds bags. And you did not ask, but 3 inches is kind of skinny- I would go for at least a 4 inch thick sidewalk.
To calculate the volume of concrete needed, use the formula for volume: length × width × depth. In this case, convert the dimensions to feet: 80 feet long, 40 feet wide, and 0.5 feet deep (6 inches). Therefore, the volume is 80 × 40 × 0.5 = 1,600 cubic feet. You would need 1,600 cubic feet of concrete for the project.
2.2 Yards
To calculate the volume of concrete needed to fill a hole with a diameter of 12 inches and a depth of 24 inches, first convert the dimensions to feet: the diameter is 1 foot and the depth is 2 feet. The radius is 0.5 feet. Using the formula for the volume of a cylinder (V = πr²h), the volume is approximately 3.14 × (0.5)² × 2 = 1.57 cubic feet. Therefore, you need about 1.57 cubic feet of concrete to fill the hole.
about 432 cubic inches
None, as a hole which is 6 inches wide and 42 inches long has no depth and thus no volume.
12.30 cubic yards
you would need 37.33 yards of concrete or 38 to be safe
Oops . . . please repost your question and include the depth of the concrete. You have to have all 3 dimensions in order to calculate volume (Cubic Yards of concrete).
If the post is a 6 x 6 you will need about 1/10 of a yardof concrete
A minimum of 1.3 cubic yards.
To calculate the volume of concrete needed for a slab that measures 74 inches long, 48 inches wide, and 4 inches thick, first convert the dimensions to feet: 74 inches = 6.17 feet, 48 inches = 4 feet, and 4 inches = 0.33 feet. Then, multiply the dimensions: 6.17 ft × 4 ft × 0.33 ft = approximately 8.16 cubic feet. Therefore, you will need about 8.16 cubic feet of concrete for the slab.
What you need to do first is to check if you have that room near the threshold of the door for that extra concrete(which is minimum of 3.5" inches) then you need to remove the top surface of the old concrete to be rough surface don't break too much just about an 1"wash clean and let it dry and only then to install the new concrete.
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.
12 ft x 10 ft x .333 ft (4 in) = 39.96 cu ft. You need enough concrete for 40 cubic ft.
12 ft x 10 ft x .333 ft (4 in) = 39.96 cu ft. You need enough concrete for 40 cubic ft.