I use a conversion program I found on the internet. It states that 1 Cubic Meter/hour = 563.567 Ounces/Minute. Divide 563.567 by 16 and you get 35.22 Pounds per Minute. (I think) Does that sound close to the answer you were looking for?
A cubic foot of air is approximately 0.0807 lbs. So to convert from cubic feet per minute to pounds per minute, just multiply cubic feet per minute by 0.0807. To go from pounds per minute to cubic feet per minute, divide by 0.0807.
There are about 31.315 cubic feet in a cubic meter, so to convert cubic meters per minute to cubic feet per minute, you'd multiply by 31.315 to get your conversion from cubic meters/minute to ft3/minute.
Because cubic meters per hour is a measure of flow-rate and BTUs (British Thermal Units) per hour is a measure of power, without additional information, these two units can't be converted into one another. BTUs per hour can be converted into Watts, which is the Si equivalent. And cubic meters per hour can be converted into cubic feet per hour, which is the English equivalent. But you cannot covert cubic meters per hour into BTUs per hour.
You cannot convert pounds per hour (lb/hr) into cubic feet per hour (ft3/hr). The pound is a measure of mass or weight while the cubic foot is a measure of volume. There is no direct conversion, unless you specify the density of the material involved.
1 cubic foot per second is 0.02831684659 cubic meter per second. A nice volume converter: Scroll down to related links and look at "Volume Converter".
1 ((cubic feet) per minute) = 1.6990108 (cubic meters) per hour, so take the number of cu ft / min and multiply by 1.699.
pound is weight, cubic feet is volume so density needs to be known to convert
Multiply cubic meters per second by 3,600 to get cubic meters per hour.
You cannot. A Pascal is the derived unit of pressure in the SI system.
Cubic feet per minute is a volume over time.
There are 0.0283168466 cubic meters in a cubic foot. If you have a cubic foot per hour, then you have 0.0283 cubic meters per hour.
2 million US gallons per day = 315.451 cubic meters per hour.
136 cubic feet / hour = 3.851 cubic metres / hour. 1 metre = 3.28 ft, so 1 cubic metre = 3.28^3 cubic feet. Therefore you divide 136 by 3.23^3
Conversion: mL per hour x 2.77777778 × 10-10 = cubic meters per second
BTU per hour is a measure of power. Cubic meters is a measure of volume. Perhaps you mean cubic meters of propane, alcohol or some other fuel.
300 cubic meters per hour is about 176.57 cubic feet per minute.Formula: Cubic meters per hour x 0.5886 (rounded) = cubic feet per minute
-- Take the number of (cubic meters per second) -- Divide the number by 3,600 -- The answer is the number of (cubic meters per second)
Use this formula: gallons per minute x 0.227 = cubic meters per hour
1 cubic foot per hour equates to 0.0283 cubic meters per hour.
The conversion factor is .277. So, cubic meters per hour x .277 = liters per second
the relevant material density is missing.
There are 0.0283168466 cubic meters in a cubic foot. If you have a cubic foot per hour, then you have 0.0283 cubic meters per hour.
There are about 1030 BTUs in a cubic foot of natural gas. If one wishes to know the gas consumption (in feet3 per hour) for a given BTU per hour usage rate, one would divide the amount of BTUs by 1030. That would yield the number of cubic feet of gas that is used per hour. Q: I'm heating a space using 10,300 BTUs per hour and I'm using my natural gas heater to do it. How many cubic feet of gas am I using per hour? A: 10,300 BTUs (the heat generated per hour) divided by 1030 (the number of BTUs per cubic foot of gas) equals 10 cubic feet. You're using 10 cubic feet per hour. You apply 10,300 BTUs to heat the space per hour, and you use 10 cubic feet of gas per hour to do that. (And yes, I picked easy numbers.)
2 million US gallons per day = 315.451 cubic meters per hour.
136 cubic feet / hour = 3.851 cubic metres / hour. 1 metre = 3.28 ft, so 1 cubic metre = 3.28^3 cubic feet. Therefore you divide 136 by 3.23^3
The conversion factor is 3.6. So, liters per second x 3.6 = cubic meters per hour.
Multiply the number of Liters/minute by 0.06