A water flow of 1,400 cubic feet per second equates to approximately 628,363.64 US gallons per minute.
The flow rate in cubic feet/second is (3*1.5*3) = 14.5 cubic ft/sec. According to Google, there are 6.229 Imperial gallons or 7.481 US gallons in 1 cubic foot. Therefore, the flow rate is 90.32 Imp gallons/sec or 108.47 US gallons/sec. If this many gallons flow per second, then (90.32 x 60) = 5419 Imp gallons flow per 1 minute, or equivalently 6508 US gallons per minute.
That depends on the rate of flow. However, at any one moment, 2,700 cubic feet can contain a maximum of 20,197.4 US gallons of water.
None. A gallon is a measure of volume whereas a cubic foot per second is a measure of flow-rate. The two measure different things and, according to the basic rules of dimensional analysis, conversion from one measure to the other is not valid.
one cubic foot is 6.229 Imperial gallons or 7.481 US gallons 700/6.229 = 112.377589 cubic feet per minute for Imperial 700/7.481 = 93.570378 cubic feet per minute for US total cubic feet of sediment basin = 20*60*8 = 9600 so 9600/112.377589 = 85.426285 minutes for the Imperial gallon or 1 hour and 25.426 minutes and 9600/93.570378 = 102.596572 minutes for the US gallon or 1 hour and 42.597 minutes
A 1.5 cubic foot per second flow of water equates to 2,592 cubic inches of flow per second.
Volume measurement is measuring the amount of space occupied by a material. Its units of measure are cubic meters, or cubic centimeters, or liters, gallons, etc.. Flow measurement is the measure of how much of a material moves past a place in a specified amount of time. Its units of measure are gallons per minute, cubic feet per minute, cubic meteres pers second, etc. Flow measurement is the quantification of bulk fluid movement and volume measurement is the system in which the solids/liquids are weighed/measured.
The amount of time it takes for 3,000,000 gallons of water to flow over Niagara Falls depends on the time of year. During the high flow season, 6 million cubic feet flows over the Falls every minute on average. During low flow season, about 4 million
The volume of water that flows in a stream in one minute (cubic feet) is(width of the stream, feet) x (depth of the water, feet) x (speed of the current, feet per minute)Notes:-- The stream may have different widths at different depths.-- The current may have different speeds at different depths.-- To convert cubic feet to gallons, multiply by 7.4805.-- To convert cubic feet to cubic yards, divide by 27.
cfm stands for cubic feet per minute - this is a term that describes the amount of air flow in duct work - it takes approximately 400 cubic feet per minute air flow per ton of air conditioning
It is an old measure for rate rate of flow.
35.3146667 (cubic feet) per second == Converters: * NOAA: http://www.srh.noaa.gov/wgrfc/resources/convert.html#flow
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).