12.597 pounds of water (approximately equal to 1.48 gallons) displaces about 0.19742 cubic feet.
436 Cubic Feet * 62.428 pounds = 27218.608 pounds. At room temp (72 degrees F)
An 800-pound boat would displace 800 pounds of water, according to Archimedes' principle. Since water has a density of approximately 62.4 pounds per cubic foot, the volume of water displaced can be calculated by dividing the weight by the density. This results in about 12.82 cubic feet of water displaced.
Yes, a cubic inch of lead displaces the same amount of water as a cubic inch of aluminum. Displacement is based on volume, so regardless of the material's density, a cubic inch of any substance will displace an equal volume of water. Therefore, both lead and aluminum, when measured at one cubic inch, will displace one cubic inch of water.
7.48 gals water
The force needed to displace 1500 pounds of water depends on whether you are trying to displace it vertically or horizontally. To displace 1500 pounds of water vertically (lifting it), you would need a force of 1500 pounds. If you are displacing it horizontally (pushing it), the force needed would depend on the resistance of the water and the method being used.
One cubic foot of water weighs 62.46 pounds.
2.25 cubic feet of water weighs about 140 pounds.
Water weighs 62.42 pounds per cubic foot which is 561.78 pounds per cubic yard. Thus 200 cubic yards of water weighs 112,356 pounds.
1,000 pounds of water is equal to about 16 cubic feet.
A cubic foot of water weighs 62.4 pounds (7.48 gallons * 8.33 pounds).
30 cubic feet of water at 8.34 pounds per US gallon equates to ~1,871.63 pounds of water.
Ten pounds of lead will weigh less in water due to buoyancy. Lead has a density greater than water, so it will displace an amount of water equivalent to its own weight, making it feel lighter in water. The exact weight in water will depend on the volume of water displaced by the lead object.