At a depth of 3 inches, a cubic yard of
material can be spread over a 10×10 area (100 square feet). It’s always good to understand how something is done even if you are going use calculators. Calculations can get tougher for round areas so we have created online calculators for rectangle areas and round areas. See below… Once You Use the Calculators, It’s Easy to Request an OrderIf you require immediate delivery, please call your order in at (859) 635-5680. Request A Quote | Click Here — About Bray Topsoil & GravelTopsoil and gravel delivered to you by Bray Topsoil & Gravel, a specialized aggregate hauler servicing the Kentucky, Ohio, and Indiana region.The experts at Bray Topsoil and Gravel serve the needs of residential and commercial customers. How much soil or mulch to buy can be a mystery, and it never seems to go as far as we think it should. These are guide lines, not rules because soil settles. For example I built 2 vegetable beds that were 20′ X 4′ and 6″ deep. I calculated I wound need 40 cubic feet of soil for each bed. I wound up using 52 cubic feet in one and 48 in the other, after the soil
settled naturally. I didn’t walk on it or tamp it down. That is 25% more than I initially figured, but those beds are level with the top on the 6″edging. To calculate the amount of bulk soil you need, you need to: Then you can follow this example to figure out what to get.
The formula is:
Bagged SoilBulk soil is not for everyone. Yes, it is more expensive to buy bagged soil, but there are some advantages. Bags keep your car or truck cleaner, can be bought a few at a time (as needed), and you don’t need to shovel it out of a truck and then shovel into the flower bed. I don’t have a truck but my small SUV can easily carry 14 bags of soil, which is a yard…and I didn’t have to pay for delivery! By using the formula for bulk soil (above) to figure out how much you will need, figuring out how many bags it equals, is a breeze. Bagged soil is usually measured in cubic feet, so convert the number of yards to cubic feet by, multiplying by 27 (the number of cubic feet in 1 yard). Let’s go back to our example from above. We calculated that we would need about 1.5 yards.
The formula to convert yards to bags is:
A few types of soil are measured by weight. Suppliers do this for one simple reason. When anything weighs over 40 pounds, it becomes very hard for the average person to pick up. Guessing how these soils are going to fit into your formula is tricky. We suggest that you compare them to the size of a bag that is labeled by volume. If a bag of top soil weighs 40 lbs, but is 1/3 the size of a 2 cubic foot bag of mulch, you’re going to need 3 bags of top soil to equal the same volume as 1 bag of mulch. If that doesn’t make sense…just call, because I couldn’t figure out how to word that differently.
Remember you can always call us or your local independent nursery for help. How do you measure 1 yard of dirt?Length in feet x Width in feet x Depth in feet (inches divided by 12). Take the total and divide by 27 (the amount of cubic feet in a yard).
How much does 1 yard of dirt look like?One yard of topsoil covers 324 square feet of soil with a depth of 1 inch, or 100 square feet with a depth of 3 inches.
How much space is a yard of dirt?A yard of any material will cover approximately 100 square feet at 3 inches of depth.
What is a yard of soil?Bulk soil is measured in yards. 1 yard equals 27 cubic feet. Think about it as a cube that is 3′ X 3′ X 3′. All machinery that can load bulk soil is, by law, labeled as to the volume of the scoop.
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