Okay, I like math problems. This one is easy: First we have to get everything in the same units so it's 2 ft. x 10 ft. = ? Okay, I'm done. No, just kidding, I assume you mean that it's a circular pool that is 2 ft. deep. Okay, I can deal with that. The volume of a circle is pi r squared h, where r is the radius, which is half the diameter, so that's 5, h=2, and pi = well pi So it's pi x 25 x 2 = 157 cubic feet and since there are 7.48 gal. per cu. ft. 157 x 7.48 = 1174 gal. I rounded the figures. So, yeah you have a thousand gallon aquarium We need to know the volume in cubic feet in order to answer the question. Is the pool 10 ft. wide by 10 feet long by 24 inches (2 ft.) deep? The missing dimension is imperative.
10 gallons
A pool measuring 10'x15'x52" holds approximately 3,944 gallons of water.
1,770 gallons 10x10x3x5.9=
I suppose you mean a round pool. You would also have to know the depth of the pool.
Assuming 25 meters is round. . . . 123449 gallons.
UK measures - a cubic foot of water weighs 1000 ounces, a gallon of water weighs 10 pounds - go from there. (See - the imperial system does have some logic!!)
A round pool with a 10-foot diameter and a 3-foot depth can hold up to 1,762 gallons of water.
If the 25 meters is a circle, it would be 68256 gallons
There is NO way to calculate this without knowing how deep the pool is filled!
196 cubic feet is the volume of your pool. Converted to U.S. gallons would be, drum roll please...1,469 gallons.
Twelve feet of water in a 10-foot round pool is approximately 7,080 gallons.
If the bottom of the pool is a uniform gradient from one side of the rectangle to the other, then volume = 2625 cubic feet = 16351 gallons.