Knowing how many square yards in feet will cover when working with depths up to six inches, in important to know, especially in construction. There will be 54 square feet when you have a depth of six inches.
To determine how much area 76.9 cubic feet covers at a depth of 12 inches, first convert the depth to feet: 12 inches is 1 foot. Then, divide the total volume by the depth: 76.9 cubic feet ÷ 1 foot = 76.9 square feet. Therefore, 76.9 cubic feet will cover an area of 76.9 square feet at a depth of 12 inches.
To calculate the amount of soil needed, you multiply the area by the desired depth. In this case, you have 9300 square feet and want a depth of 12 inches. Convert the depth to feet (12 inches = 1 foot) and multiply: 9300 square feet x 1 foot = 9300 cubic feet of soil. So, you need 9300 cubic feet of soil to cover the area with a depth of 12 inches.
To cover 144 sq ft with soil to a depth of 6 inches, you would need 72 cubic feet of soil. This can be calculated by multiplying the area (144 sq ft) by the desired depth (6/12 ft) to get the volume in cubic feet.
The measúre of length in inches cannot be converted to the area in square feet. There are 144 square inches in a square foor, so 27 * 144 = 3888 square inches.
12 A cubic foot = 12" x 12" x 12" so if a square foot 1" thick were stacked 12 times it would = a cubic foot. Although if you're talking about surface area it would be 6 to cover all sides My thoughts exactly therefore it would cover 144 sq. ft. 1" thick.
To determine how much area 76.9 cubic feet covers at a depth of 12 inches, first convert the depth to feet: 12 inches is 1 foot. Then, divide the total volume by the depth: 76.9 cubic feet ÷ 1 foot = 76.9 square feet. Therefore, 76.9 cubic feet will cover an area of 76.9 square feet at a depth of 12 inches.
To calculate the amount of soil needed, you multiply the area by the desired depth. In this case, you have 9300 square feet and want a depth of 12 inches. Convert the depth to feet (12 inches = 1 foot) and multiply: 9300 square feet x 1 foot = 9300 cubic feet of soil. So, you need 9300 cubic feet of soil to cover the area with a depth of 12 inches.
(324) divided by (the depth of the loam in inches)
It depends to what depth. One cubic INCH will cover 400 square feet in sandstone dust but it will be only 0.00002 inches deep!
Three tons of topsoil will cover approximately 180 square feet when spread to a depth of 6 inches.
It depends on how thick the mulch is applied. For example, if applied at an average depth of two inches, the cubic yard of mulch will cover 162 square feet. If applied at an average depth of four inches, half that area or 81 square feet, etc.
The 'square feet' of area that it covers is 1,620/(depth of the mulch, in inches)
Mulch is often sold by weight in bags, but a volume is assigned to the material in bags, too. We'll treat this as a volume problem as we have an area to cover (880 square feet), and a depth of coverage assigned (2 inches). We have to find the volume of that 880 square feet by 2 inch volume. First, we need to convert either the area in square feet to square inches, or the depth in inches to feet. The latter makes more sense (and it's easier), so let's do that.The 2 inches is 2/12ths of a foot, or 1/6th of a foot. We'll go with that. If we have 880 square feet by 1/6th of a foot in depth, we have 880 square feet times 1/6 feet, which is 146 2/3rds cubic feet of mulch, the required amount of mulch to cover the given area to the desired depth.
22.22 cu yd
However much you want. By suitably varying the thickness, you could, in theory cover the surface of the earth or even a larger area.The 'square feet' of area that it covers is 324/(depth in inches)
1.174 square feet.
If it is the same as concrete it will cover 162 square feet. concrete covers 81 square feet by 4" deep