Send me 20,000,000 nickels and I'll put them in a 5 gallon bucket counting as I go and then I'll tell you.
This is a very silly question. This can be a US Gallon, or an Imperial Gallon. The lid can be a screw cap on a tin can or a screw opening on a plastic Jerry can. It might also be a fuel can on a boat or a generator. The size of a bucket lid is about the size of the bucket you are talking about. Well, considering most people would specify one of those other things if they really meant them, I'm guessing the "asker" is referring to a standard, everyday 5-gallon bucket. Of course you could have a short and fat bucket or a skinny and tall bucket, but that's not what they asked, was it? It's not a silly question, just a stupid answer. I think what you're looking for are the dimensions of the bucket. The top of a standard bucket is around 11.9" in diameter, which means about 37.4" in circumference. The lid must fit on that, so you can make calculations as such. Sound good?
A 5-gallon bucket filled with nickels typically contains around 1,000 to 1,200 nickels, depending on how tightly they are packed. Since each nickel is worth 5 cents, the total value would be approximately $50 to $60. However, the exact amount can vary based on the specific number of coins in the bucket.
A standard 5-gallon bucket has a volume of about 0.67 cubic feet or approximately 0.19 cubic meters. Given that sand has a density of around 100 pounds per cubic foot, it would take roughly 67 pounds of sand to fill the bucket. However, the exact amount can vary based on the type of sand and its moisture content.
well i would put about 5 gallons of soil in there, maybe a tiny bit less so it does not overflow.
Fill the 1 gallon bucket and ignore the other.
no
you fill the 3 gallon bucket into the 5 gallon bucket twice 2 *3 6 gallons but the 5 gallon will only overflow once it hits 5 gallons. You get the 1 gallon half in the 3 gallon bucket and dump the water out of the 5 gallon bucket. You pour the 1 gallon left from the 3 gallon bucket into the 5 gallon bucket and then refill the 3 gallon bucket and put the 3 gallons in making 4 gallons.
Send me 20,000,000 nickels and I'll put them in a 5 gallon bucket counting as I go and then I'll tell you.
A standard 5-gallon bucket can hold approximately 20,000 dimes, as each dime has a volume of about 0.00311 cubic inches. With each dime being worth 10 cents, a 5-gallon bucket of dimes would be worth $2,000 (20,000 dimes x $0.10).
a bucket could be any measure. some common buckets are 1 gallon, 2.5 gallons (10 qts.), 3 gallons, 4 gallons, 5 gallons and 6 gallons. The most popular of these are 2.5 gallon galvanized steel, and 5 gallon plastic buckets. Cup measurements are too small for buckets, a 2.5 gallon bucket would be a 40 cup bucket, for example.
not counting the weight of the bucket itself, the oil would weigh around 37 pounds.
There are 8 pints in 1 gallon, so a 6-gallon bucket would require 48 pints of water to fill.
Not all 5 gallon buckets would have the same weight capacity. A common cheap plastic 5-gallon bucket would likely hold over 40 lbs; but age, quality of construction, materials used, and other factors would greatly effect weight capacity.
48 cups 1 gallon = 16 cups 1 cup = 0.06 Gallon
A 5-gallon bucket typically holds about 0.67 cubic feet of material. Crusher run gravel weighs approximately 2,500 pounds per cubic yard. Therefore, a 5-gallon bucket of crusher run gravel would weigh around 1,667 pounds.
The weight per US gallon of water at 25 C is 8.33 pounds [per gallon. 2 gallons of water would weigh 16.66 pounds plus the weight of the bucket itself.