If you assume the cord of wood formed a perfect rectangular prism you would simply multiply the length*width*height to get 128 cubic feet. However, it is obvious that unless the wood is cut into square pieces such as 6"x6" or 4"x4", there will be lots of air space inside your cord. But the basic answer is as above. Hope that helps answer this rather odd question. I disagree that it is an odd question. it is a very good question. Buyers of firewood should be aware of the cubic feet because many sellers sell variations on the cord, and a smart buyer will be able to figure out all the cubic feet variations and know whether he is being shorted by the seller.
128 cu. ft. (4ftx4ftx8ft)
You find cubic centimeters by measuring the volume of something.
A cubic centimetre is a measure of volume. For example: a cube measuring 1cm x 1cm x 1cm = 1 cubic centimetre.
the unit is m3 (cubic metre)
343 cubic cm
128 cu. ft. (4ftx4ftx8ft)
Some collective nouns for firewood are:a cord of firewood (128 cubic feet)a stack of firewooda load of firewooda bundle of firewood
A cubic centimetre (cm3) is a unit of volume (V).
Volume is measured in cubic units
You find cubic centimeters by measuring the volume of something.
cubic metre
cubic (some distance)
That depends on which aspect of the cube you are measuring and the size of the cube.. If you are measuring the dimensions, you might use meters. If you are measuring the surface area, you might use square meters. If you are measuring the volume, you might use cubic meters.
Cubic centimetres or cubic inches.
The answer when finding volume is always a cubic measurement. The volume of a cube measuring 4 inches on all of its sides is 64 cubic inches.
You use cubic units when you describe volume because a cube is measuring 1 unit on each edge and the edge has a volume of one cubic unit.
The SI unit for volume is the cubic meter: m3