17.5 cubic feet or about 3/4 of 1 cubic yard.
A hole with two dimensions has no third dimension. → its volume is 6 ft × 10 in × 0 ft = 0 ft³ → You require NO concrete to fill a hole which is given as an area as it has NO volume.
Depends on the length of the hole.
To calculate the volume of a 2x2x2 hole, you multiply the dimensions together: 2 feet × 2 feet × 2 feet, which equals 8 cubic feet. Therefore, you would need 8 cubic feet of concrete to fill the hole completely.
18.6240 yd³
about 432 cubic inches
None, as a hole which is 6 inches wide and 42 inches long has no depth and thus no volume.
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.
How much concrete is required to fill 100 cu feet
I use one bag to 1 1/2 bags per hole and fill the rest of the way back with tamped topsoil... whatever came out of the hole.
Fill it till it runs out of the fill hole. Again that's the FILL HOLE, not the DRAIN HOLE. They are separate.
(0.45/2)2 x pi x 2 = 1/3rd of a cubic meter
To calculate the amount of concrete needed to fill a 12-inch diameter hole that is 18 inches deep, first convert the measurements to feet: the diameter is 1 foot and the depth is 1.5 feet. The volume of a cylinder is given by the formula V = πr²h. The radius (r) is 0.5 feet, so the volume is approximately π(0.5)²(1.5) = about 1.18 cubic feet. Thus, you would need roughly 1.18 cubic feet of concrete to fill the hole.