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				Math question for all you smart guys
			 
			This seems like it should be easy to me but I'm not so sure now. If one cubic yard is 3 ft x 3 ft x 3 ft, what are the dimensions of a cube whose volume is 10 cubic yards. I thought it would be 30 ft x 30 ft x 30 , but that would one 2700 yards. Where am I going wrong. I'm afraid my ignorance is showing, but it wouldn't be the first time... 
				__________________ David 1972 911T/S MFI Survivor | ||
|  11-03-2011, 08:24 PM | 
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| D idn't E arn I t | 
			27 cubic ft x 10 = 270 cubic ft. rjp 
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|  11-03-2011, 08:28 PM | 
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| Burn the fire. | 
			10 cubic yards? 1yd = 3ft so... 10³yd = 30³ft 30³ft = X • X • X Try it that way. 
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|  11-03-2011, 08:29 PM | 
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| Max Sluiter | 
			It is the cube root of 270. Get your calcumalator out.
		 
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|  11-03-2011, 08:34 PM | 
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			I'm just doing this in my head while drinking. but wouldn't 9 sq' on the bottom.middle and top equal 27sq'. Not yards.
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|  11-03-2011, 08:36 PM | 
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| Registered Join Date: Jul 2001 Location: Lawrenceville GA 30045 
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			6.46 ft x 6.46 ft x 6.46 ft = 270 ft^3 = 10 yds ^3
		 
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|  11-03-2011, 08:40 PM | 
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			Oh I got it now. You were right about the 30 by 30 by 30. Except you forgot those were ' and used yards instead.I'm guessing 30 x30 x 30 '.Not yards.
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|  11-03-2011, 08:42 PM | 
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| Banned Join Date: May 2005 Location: Earth 
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			It's 2700 sq' not yards.
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|  11-03-2011, 08:45 PM | 
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|  11-03-2011, 08:50 PM | 
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| Registered | 
			
So these are the exterior dimensions?  I think you're right but it just seems too small since its 10 times mores than 3 x 3 x 3!
		 
				__________________ David 1972 911T/S MFI Survivor | ||
|  11-03-2011, 08:59 PM | 
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| Banned Join Date: May 2005 Location: Earth 
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			oops. my mistake. I meant cubic ' not sq'.
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|  11-03-2011, 09:00 PM | 
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| Driver | 
			It's not 288?
		 
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|  11-03-2011, 09:40 PM | 
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| durn for'ner Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: South of Sweden 
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			This is exactly why the SI-metric system is so much easier.
		 
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|  11-03-2011, 10:40 PM | 
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| Banned Join Date: May 2005 Location: Earth 
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			1 cubic yard is 27sq'.  Im thirsty. | ||
|  11-03-2011, 11:00 PM | 
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| Gon fix it with me hammer | 
			
not really, this is one example where SI is just about the pretty much the same task. 1 x 1 x 1 = 1 cubic whatever So what sides does a cube with 10 cubic meter volume have? it ain't 10, and it aint 1 either.. 3.16227766 meter EDIT CRAP, and even that is wrong. so much for metric.. 
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|  11-04-2011, 02:18 AM | 
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| Dog-faced pony soldier | 
			Cube root of 10 = approx. 2.15 Units don't matter. 2.15 yards = +/- 6.XX feet. 2.15^3 = 10 
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|  11-04-2011, 02:21 AM | 
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Thats how I did it.
		 
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|  11-04-2011, 03:27 AM | 
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| Dog-faced pony soldier | 
			Yep, calculate first then convert the units.
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|  11-04-2011, 03:46 AM | 
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| Registered | 
			Volume is proportionate to the cube of the linear dimension, so the cube doesn't have to get 10X "bigger" (each side's length) to have 10X the volume.  That's why if you took a gazelle and scaled it up to be as big as an elephant, it's legs would break.  It's mass is proportional to the volume (cube) but the strength of its leg bone is proportional to the cross sectional area (square).  As you scale up the gazelle, mass increases faster than bone strength and the legs break.
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|  11-04-2011, 03:53 AM | 
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| Edministrator Join Date: Aug 2003 Location: SF east bay 
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			Yes. Surface to weight ratio, a driving force of nature. That's why ants are so strong, proportionally.
		 
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|  11-04-2011, 05:59 AM | 
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