12x24x50 = 14,400 cubic inches = 8.33 cubic feet
A cu ft hpolds about 7.5 gallons
8.33 x 7.5 = 62.5 gallons
Inches are a measure of length, and gallons is a measure of volume. However, volume can be measured in units of length cubed (because, for instance, the volume of a cube is the length of each side cubed).The are 231 cubic inches (or in3) per gallon.
Volume = (pi) R2 L = (pi) (30)2 (12) = 10,800 pi = 33,929.2 cubic inches = 146.88 gallons (rounded)
1 sq ft = 144 sq inches 1 sq ft x 1 inch deep = 144 cubic inches / (231 cubic inches per gallon) = 0.6234 gallon (rounded)
If the pot is round and 14 inches across, theneach 1 inch deep is 2/3 gallon (within 0.04%).
You have a gallon of water. There is no deep philosophical meaning. =============================================== Another contributor was way more technical, but only slightly more philosophical: "1 gallon" is just another way of saying . . . 128 fluid ounces 231 cubic inches 4 quarts 8 pints 16 cups. Note that any of these is just a description of an amount of space. It doesn't matter what's in it. It could even be empty space. It doesn't change a thing. The numbers and the meanings are still the same.
44.88 gallons
2.961 US gallons
1 gallon = 231 cubic inches Volume of the container = (12 x 12 x 48) = 6,912 cubic inches = 29.922 gallons (rounded)
As deep as the container in which the water is in
Inches are a measure of length, and gallons is a measure of volume. However, volume can be measured in units of length cubed (because, for instance, the volume of a cube is the length of each side cubed).The are 231 cubic inches (or in3) per gallon.
4.578 gallons for every inch the water is deep.
2 feet 6 inches deep
How deep do you want that ?If you want it 1.6 inches deep, then it can cover 1 square foot.If you want it 10-ft deep, then it can't cover that much area.
there are 231 cubic inches in a gallon of water so there are 598.44 gallons of water in that size pool.
A gallon of water occupies 1 gallon of space. A gallon is a measure of volume. So this is a trick question. Unless you want it in different units (m^3, in^3) this question makes no sense. You could say it takes up 0.00378541178 meters cubed
Roughly? And I repeat roughly? Twelve inches wide, fifteen inches deep.
The exact volume of water cannot be determined because we don't know how deep or high the container is but it would have a surface area of 396 ft2.