A face cord is 32 square feet on the face. How many cubic feet in 1 cord [firewood]? emmette, Had a cord of firewood delivered and stacked. And that’s before considering that different types of wood – deriving from their varying usability, calorific value (how much heat they provide when burned) – have different price tags even in the same locations! We all know that 128 feet of loosely thrown wood will not stack up to 128 cubic feet. If someone is paying $400 per cord of any type of wood they will expect a full cord equalling 128 cubic feet. It depends on how long the pieces of wood are. I never was very good at this type of math. A standard, full cord of wood is a volume of 128 cubic feet, measured as a pile 8 feet long, 4 feet high and 4 feet wide. He also said he thinks in most cases these firewood dealers are not trying to rip people off, a lot of them just don’t know how to properly measure and calculate a cord of wood. I was pondering what Admin said about what they are charging for a cord of wood. Is there a measurement for thrown on wood for 16″,18″ & 24″. I can not handle a ruler or tape measure since I don’t have thumbs. Just a couple months ago I had a guy come out and buy some wood from me. When I stack green wood to season I stack it in half cords on pallets. I run a full-time woodlot in Heber Arizona and around here most people deliver a “cord” as a well rounded truck-load with no wood racks. You may get a load of wood that measures out to be a full cord on the truck, but, when you stack it, it may measure out be a few cubic feet more or less. If you are buying a face cord, divide the depth of a … I personally wouldn’t even pay that much. A standard cord is piled a 4 feet x 8 feet stack and this can be called a rick. Needs to be filled about 3 inches short of all the way up on my 8 foot bed. 31 x 3.66cf equals 113 cf divided by 128cf equals .88 or 88%. What do you figure? See table Multiply these three numbers together. 80 Cubic Feet to Cords = 0.625. It’s a shame that soooo many folks ask you to calculate cords from straight measurements, though. I’m so confused. 90 Cubic Feet to Cords = 0.7031. I was wondering if you could add (perhaps to the far right side of your website) a calculator, this would take a lot of the chaff out of the inquiries by letting them multiply & divide all by themselves, perhaps captioning the calculator with the 2 basic factors for calculating cords. 4 Cubic Feet to Cords = 0.0313. symbols, abbreviations, or full names for units of length, I would recommend to your readers to attempt to calculate how many cords of wood on there own, and then verify their answer with the following fire wood calculator page, http://burtini.ca/metrology/calc_fire.html. I had firewood delivered and paid for a full cord, when measured was 17″ inches wide, 4′ feet high, and 10′ feet, 4″ inches long. I’m amazed by folks who have no issues communicating through a computer yet are complete strangers to basic math. 1/8 cord is 16 cubic feet. Fairly tight fit but fender wells on the inside. I wasn’t expecting you all to want me to do all the math for you. Admin, great site. That is hard to translate to standing trees, but with basic geometry and a standardized table, you can get a good idea of what your harvest will be. If you happen to forget the number of cubic inches in a cubic foot simply multiply 12x12x12=1728. Because of this, firewood measurements are not exact. just so you know we live in Michigan and we only pay 80.00 a cord for hardwood logs here. The length of the logs dictate how much wood you get. Just so you know. Figure around 180 cubic feet per cord. If I have a pile of wood that is 4’*2’*2 w. How much wood do I have. Free mulch calculor that supports rubber mulch, wood chips mulch, and returns resutls in volume (cubic feet, cubic yards, cubic meters, cu ya, cu ft, liters) or number of bags.