length x width x height? Basically, but you need to get the height at both ends; sometimes they make the front a couple inches shorter than the back, for aerodynamics.
You need to know the height and width, as well as the length to determine the volume of a trailer in cubic feet.
4013 cf3X 1cm3 = 113.635495 cm3/53' trailer 153' trailer35.31467 cf3
That is 4,240 cubic ft.
That is approximately 4,240 cubic ft.
200.5 cubic feet.
1.85 cubic yards equals 49.95 cubic feet.
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet.
100 gallons = 13.37 cubic feet.
A yard is 3 feet so 3 feet cubed would be 27 cubic feet in a cubic yard
4013 cubic feet for a standard 53' dry van. See related link for source
A trailer this size is 541.625 square meters.
2100
one tractor trally load how many cubic meters
In order to be legal on the road, the maximum width of the trailer is 8.5 feet. That means that a 53 foot trailer with 1375 cubic feet of capacity would end up being 3 feet tall.
53' x 8.5' x 9' = 4054.5 cubic feet => 4054.5 cubic feet / 27 cubic feet/cubic yard = 150.17 cubic yards.
The number of bales that can fit onto a semi will depend on the width and length of the semi's trailer and the overall cubic feet of each bale. A standard semi trailer in North America can be 8 feet to 8 feet 6 inches wide by 13 feet 6 inches high and anywhere from 28 to 53 feet long. Small square hay bales are usually 5.25 to 6 cubic feet. So if multiple the height by width, by length, you'll get the cubic feet of the trailer, you then divide that number by the cubic feet of the hay bales to figure out how many will fit in each size of trailer.
'Dimensional weight' is a strange term, what is it? If your packages are 22 x 15 x 11 inches, each one is 3630 cubic inches, not 3707. If the trailer is 1842 cubic feet (not cubic square feet which is meaningless), then we can calculate as follows. Each package is 3630 cubic inches. To put this into cubic feet we have to divide by 12 to the power 3, which is 12 x 12 x12 =1728. Therefore each package is 3630/1728 cubic feet, or 2.10 cubic feet. Therefore the trailer will take 1842/2.10 packages =877.
4054.5
2727 cubic feet
0.52 cubic yards = 14.04 cubic feet.
How many feet in a yard? A: 3How many cubic feet in a cubic yard? A: 3 * 3 * 3 = 27235 / 27 = 8.7