First you have to know how many cubic yards are in 10 tons, just ask the company your buying the material from, they know as they do this all year long. pea gravel, road base, and sand will all cover at a different rate because of the size of the material.
one cubic yard of material is 3ft x3ft x3ft or 27 cubic feet If you spread 3 inches deep the one yard will cover , on average, 108 square feet surface area.
At 2 inches deep one cubic yard will cover approx 162 square ft of surface aera.
chet2010
9.26 cubic yards for every inch of depth.
One side of a square is 10 inches long. How many one square inch tiles are needed to cover its area?
If a 3-inch square was covered in 1-inch squares, you would need a total of 9 of the 1-inch squares to completely cover the 3-inch square. This is because you can fit a 1-inch square into each inch of the 3-inch square, resulting in a total of 9 squares to cover the entire area. Each of the smaller 1-inch squares would cover a portion of the larger 3-inch square, with no overlap or gaps if properly arranged.
The area of a 14-inch circle is: 153.9 square inches.
A 10.5-inch circle has an area of 86.59 square inches.
9.26 cubic yards for every inch of depth.
3" inch depth covers 108 sq ft so 450 sq ft and 3" depth = 4.5 yard aprx
It depends on the depth you require. Using a 12-inch depth, you will need about 218.5 tons of gravel (170.4 cubic yards).
Depends on depth of gravel you plan to put down. For each 1 inch depth: Estimate gravel having a density of 2.7. 150 x 1/12 x 62.4 x 2.7 = 2106 pounds (slightly more than 1 ton) so if you want 3 inches of gravel you need about 3 tons of gravel
Volume = 120/12= 10 cubic feet for each 1 inch of depth= 2 bags for each 1 inch of depth.
1 cubic yard equals 27 cubic feet. At a six inch depth 1 cubic foot will cover 2 square feet, so 27 cubic feet will cover 54 square feet.
An 8-foot wide by 90-foot long by 8-inch depth requires a minimum of 2,565.5 cubic yards (22.8 tons) of gravel.
It depends on the depth you want the gravel to be and also how much you are charged per cubic yard. However, you will need a minimum of 2,565.5 cubic yards of gravel if you use a 4-inch depth to cover 1,800 square feet. This equates to roughly 28.5 tons of gravel.
Technically, none. A square foot is a measure of area whereas it is the volume of water that is required. To convert from area to volume it is necessary to know the depth. A twelfth of a cubic foot will cover an area of one square foot to a depth of 1 inch. A cubic foot will cover it to a depth of 1 foot, 100 cubic feet will cover it to a depth of 100 feet.
The volume that needs to be filled is 132ft * 1.5in = 132ft*(1.5/12)ft=132ft*0.125ft=16.5 cubic feet of gravel needed. ---- 1 cubic foot is 1,728 cubic inches (12 in x 12 in x 12 in) The area described above is 28,512 cubic inches divided by 1,728 cubic inches or 16.5 cubic feet
62/3 cubic yards for every 1-foot deep. 5 cubic yards for every 9-inches deep. 31/3 cubic yards for every 6-inches deep. 5/9 cubic yard for every 1-inch deep.
The area that 1 pound of sand can cover depends on the depth of the layer being considered. Typically, 1 pound of dry sand can cover approximately 0.5 to 1 square foot at a depth of about 1 inch. If the depth is increased, the coverage area will decrease accordingly. Therefore, for specific applications, it's important to calculate based on the desired thickness of the sand layer.