Math help needed

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extraspecialman

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I have a single row of wood stacked 5 feet high,23 feet long,stacked square against steel post,and the wood averages about 22 inches long.Just wonderin how many cords this would be?I hauled all this but about 4 wheelbarrow loads in 1 load on my 16 foot trailer,the ol chevy didnt want much more,but it moved on down the road.Thanks for your help,just cant my brain workin tonight to figure this 1 out.
 
A cord is 128 cubic feet so you multiply the three measurements however they must be a common unit.

I will use feet so 22"/12= 1.83 ft

1.83x5x23=210.45

210 divided by 128= 1.64 Cords
 
A cord is 128 cu. ft. stacked, so to find the volume of your stack, you take :

5ft x 23 ft x 2ft (rounded up the 22" pieces) = 230 cu. ft.

230/128 = 1.8 cords
 
Obviously the smilie and tongue-in-cheek was lost on you.
No it wasn't. I about died laughing. Unfortunately, I have been moving my computer to a new location and was unable to write back until now. A thousand pardons to Ray and all others from Doctor Ed. :givebeer:

BTW, only a few probably understand what "truncation" really means. As a computer programmer, I learned that word long ago. The quick pun that Ray authored is indeed a classic. :clap:
 
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