Want this question answered?
Standard 55 gallon drum measures 22.5 inches in diameter, and 33.5 inches high. You can fit ten in the container lengthwise, four widthwise, and either two or three stacked atop each other (depending on the height of the container.. if you have 110 inches of inside height, it'll be three high). So, if it's three high, you'll be able to fit a total of 120 in a 20 ft. shipping container. This is, of course, assuming that these drums are not on pallets.
How big are the barrels? You are missing the third part of the equation.
Perhaps this Guide to Green Coffee Bags will help you.
4400 gallons, or 4,398.24 gallon rounded off.
If the whole container is rectangular, then its volume is 18" x 24" x 30" = 12,960 cubic inches = 7.5 cubic feet = 56.104 gallons
Standard 55 gallon drum measures 22.5 inches in diameter, and 33.5 inches high. You can fit ten in the container lengthwise, four widthwise, and either two or three stacked atop each other (depending on the height of the container.. if you have 110 inches of inside height, it'll be three high). So, if it's three high, you'll be able to fit a total of 120 in a 20 ft. shipping container. This is, of course, assuming that these drums are not on pallets.
Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit. A container that is 20 feet long is 1 TEU while a 40 foot container unit is 2 TEU. A 53 foot container is 2.65 TEUs
2/1/12th GALLON
20
How big are the barrels? You are missing the third part of the equation.
The square feet are simply the width times the length. But, I will assume you are interested in the inside dimension of the container or the volume. A sea container is 39' and 3/8" long by 7' 8-3/8"wide by 7' 9-5/8" high. Therefore a 40 foot container holds 2261 cubic feet of area
About 15 miles a gallon so depending on the volume of the gas container that will be how far it goes.
[object Object]
The volume 10 foot times 5 foot times 2 foot is 100 cubic feet. 100 cubic feet are 2831.6846592 liters.
I dont know...try it
WolframAlpha, a new search engine gives a UK gallon of water at 0.1337 cu.ft so your pool should take 6,462 gallon to fill, give or take a cupful. Check it out!
But they do. You can't squeeze a gallon of liquid into a half-gallon jar, and you can't make one gallon of liquid fill a two gallon bucket. But while liquids do have a definite volume, they don't have a definite shape. As long as the volume is right the container can be square, round, flat or whatever.