A dump truck's capacity depends upon the size of the truck. Dump trucks can carry as little as 2 cubic yards and as many as 30 cubic yards of material. Topsoil is sold by the yard. Contact your local supplier for pricing.
Provided it's not a short tandem, 15 yards with a 'rock tub' dump body and 16 yards with a 'dirt tub' dump body are typical.
0.47 cubic yards.
1 cubic foot equals 0.03704 cubic yards.
20. "Linear" is an unnecessary adjective. If 'Feet' is not preceeded by "square" or "cubic" it refers to a line, or one-dimensional measurement.
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.
There are many different sizes of dump trucks. They can hold anywhere from 5 cubic yards to 20 cubic yards.
Your dump truck will hold approximately 176 cubic yards. This can be calculated by multiplying the dimensions together (16 x 5.5 x 8 = 704) and then converting the result from cubic inches to cubic yards (704 / 46,656 = 0.0151).
20
I would like to see 20 cubic yards on a tandem. I would hate to pay that overload ticket.
15.2911
The total volume of the trailer would be 53 x 8.5 x 9 = 4048.5 cubic feet. To convert this to cubic yards, divide by 27 (since 1 cubic yard is equal to 27 cubic feet). Therefore, the trailer has approximately 149.94 cubic yards of capacity.
17 tons
It depends on the size of the dump trucks, but assuming a standard dump truck can hold about 10-15 cubic yards of dirt, it would take approximately 260,000 to 390,000 dump trucks to move 3.9 million cubic yards of dirt.
Depends on the height. Multiply, lenght x width x height of trailer to get the volume of trailer in cubic ft. Then divide by one cubic yard converted in cubic ft. (3x3x3=27). It should give you an approximate amount. (LxWxH=V/27)= cubic yards
0.619 cubic yards.
1 cubic meter is 1.308 cubic yards.
440,740.741 cubic yards.