50 bajillion
31.987 gallons per foot.
7.481 liquid gallons OR 6.429 dry gallons (US)
There are 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot. 300,000 gallons divided by 7.48 gallons/cubic foot equals 40106.95 cubic feet.
1 cubic foot = 7.4805 gallons
FLOW is typically expressed as some volume of water per second or minute. Common examples are gallons or liters per second (or minute), and cubic feet or cubic meters per second (or minute): Each can be easily converted to another, as follows:1 cubic foot = 7.481 gallons1 cubic meter = 35.31 cubic feet1 cubic meter = 1,000 litersMethod 1: Measuring Time to Fill ContainerThe Container Fill method works only for very small systems. Build a temporary dam that forces all the water to flow through a single outlet pipe, Using a bucket or larger container of a known volume, use a stopwatch to time how long it takes to fill the container. Then, divide the container size by the number of seconds.Example:Container = 5 gallon paint bucketTime to fill = 8 seconds5 gallons / 8 seconds = 0.625 gallons per second (gps)To convert into Cubic Feet per Second (cfs):7.481 gallons per second = 1 cubic foot per second, so0.625 gps / 7.481 = 0.0835 cubic feet per second (cfs).
A 72x72x24 foot container holds 930,696.3 gallons.
What sort of container? A 20-foot International Freight Container is 8' x 8' x 20'
A 35,200 cubic foot container can hold up to 263,314.29 gallons.
7.48 US gallons of water.
There are about 7.48 US gallons in a 12 x 12 x 12 (or 1728) cubic inch container. (That's a cubic foot, but you probably knew that.) There are about 12,926.3 US gallons in a 12 x 12 x 12 cubic foot container. Other units of measure of your 12 x 12 x 12 container will yield different results.
If 169 is floor area, then you are talking about roughly 430 square feet of wall. I would paint that with a bit less than 2 gallons.
Approximately 4 gallons.
a gallon of interior paint covers on average 400 square feet. you need to figure how many square feet of wall space you have to determine how many gallons you will need.
Square foot coverage can be calculated by dividing 1600 by the number of mils you are applying. In your case: 1600/8= 200sqft.gal For 2592 sqft you would need 12.96 gallons, so 13 gallons.
You haven't said how deep it is. To measure volume you need three dimensions.
A square foot cannot hold water its 2 dimensional. What you see is what you get . A one cubic foot container can hold 7.48 US gallons of liquid.
One cubic foot is a measure of volume. A one cubic meter container could hold up about 264 gallons of water.