To fill in this size pool you'll need 100.5 cubic yards of material. If you mean how many gallons of water to fill the pool, you'd need 20,300 gallons of water to fully fill it.
0.47 cubic yards.
1 cubic foot equals 0.03704 cubic yards.
Contractors and construction people often speak of "yards" of concrete, topsoil, or fill. They are in fact speakeing of "cubic yards" which is the common unit of measure when reffering to these items, they simply abbreviate and everybody they generally interface with understands that the quantity refferred to is cubic or a volume.For instance a concrete sidewalk 4 inches thick, 4 feet wide, and 120 feet long requires 1/3 foot X 4 feet X 120 feet or 160 cubic feet of concrete. There are 27 (3 X 3 X 3) cubic feet in a cubic yard. Then the sidewalk would require 160 ft3 divided by 27 ft3/yd3 or 6 cubic yards. The contractor would call the Ready Mix plant and say, "I need 6 yards of concrete at this address at this time" and 6 cubic yards would be delivered as requested.Additionally, Earth Moving equipment capacities are measured in cubic yards. It's not unusual to hear a contractor say, "Yah, we had to move 3,000,000 yards of fill to build that runway", or some other project.It's not proper terminology, but it is communicating, and that is the desired outcome. A yard is a measure of distance; a cubic foot is a measure of volume. They aren't compatible. There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard.
20. "Linear" is an unnecessary adjective. If 'Feet' is not preceeded by "square" or "cubic" it refers to a line, or one-dimensional measurement.
I must know which material you are using, since the volumes of different materials that have the same weight ain't the same. When you have the density of that material, then you can find the volume by the following formula. volume = weight*density then you can convert the unit you want at: http://www.smartconversion.com/unit_conversion/Volume_unit_converter.aspx
133.33 cubic yards, that's 400 feet
To determine how many yards of sand are needed to fill a 275-gallon oil tank, first, convert gallons to cubic yards. There are 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard and 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot. Thus, 275 gallons is approximately 37 cubic feet (275 ÷ 7.48). Dividing by 27 yields about 1.37 cubic yards. Therefore, you would need approximately 1.37 yards of sand to fill a 275-gallon oil tank.
600 US gallons = 138,600 cubic inches = 80.208333... cubic feet = 2.9707 cubic yards. (rounded)
266.66 cubic yards ( not square yards)
At 4" thick you will need 1.23 cubic yards.
You can't fill a space with yards, only with cubic yards (27 cu.ft.).28 x 12 x 1/3 = 112 cubic feet / 27 cubic feet = 4.148148...cubic yards will be required.
None because it's a hole but 6 cubic yards of dirt will fill it up.
14.8 cubic yards will work but round to 15 to be sure.
To calculate the volume of the area, multiply the length, width, and height: 120 x 92 x 24 = 331,776 cubic inches. To convert cubic inches to cubic yards (since 1 cubic yard = 46,656 cubic inches), divide 331,776 by 46,656 to get approximately 7.1 cubic yards of dirt needed to fill the area.
To calculate the volume of dirt needed to fill the area, you would need to know the depth of the area in yards. If the depth is 3 yards, then you would need 1800 yards of dirt (600 cubic yards ÷ 3 yards). If the depth is 1 yard, then you would need 600 yards of dirt.
To calculate the volume in cubic yards, first find the volume in cubic inches: (4 \times 8 \times 8 = 256) cubic inches. Next, convert cubic inches to cubic yards by dividing by 46,656 (since there are 46,656 cubic inches in one cubic yard). Thus, (256 \div 46,656 \approx 0.0055) cubic yards of dirt are needed to fill the area.
You also need to specify the average depth.(And by "yards" we assume you mean cubic yards).