In round figures it is nominaly a 65.9 US gallon tank. Please do not use that volume as the quantity of water it will hold when in use though. Tanks are never filled to the brim. They are usually filled to within an inch of the top and they usually have an average of 2 to 3 inchs of gravel (substrate) on the bottom and a few rocks as land/aquascaping. This amount of displacement would have to be taken into consideration. On average I would be counting on the tank actually holding more like 50 to 55 gals US.
If you mean inches, the tank would hold up to 11.64 gallons of water.
The volume of that space is (30 x 30 x 25) = 22,500 cubic inches = 97.4 gallons. (rounded)
It is no posible to answer the question because the units of measurement for 30 x 30 x 30 are not given!
The capacity of the tank is 491.4286 gallons (rounded). We have no way of knowing
how many gallons may be in it, or whether it's completely empty.
15.6 gallons.
500000gal
There are 2 tanks and both are 19 gallons.
Depending on how your vehicle is equipped : front tanks were 17 / 18 / or 19 U.S. gallons rear tanks were 18 or 19 U.S. gallon combinations were either 36 or 37 U.S. gallons
Gas tanks range from tiny tanks (like on my 81 Yamaha 250xt - 1.5 gallons) to 6 gallons in some I would suppose.
steel tanks / front 19 gal / rear 18 gal / = 37 gallons ( U.S. ) plastic tanks / front ( 2 available ) 17 or 18 gal / rear 19 gal / = 36 or 37 gallons ( U.S. )
If you are transporting the fuel in containers that are not your fuel tanks, you can carry up to 1000 pounds of it. That's around 133 gallons. If the fuel is in your tanks, you can carry as much as they'll hold.
It depends entirely on the design of the car ! Smaller cars have smaller fuel tanks.
Depends on the type of truck, city day cabs that just run local routes can have just one tank and as small as 50 gallons. Over the road long haul trucks generally have 2 tanks with 50-150 gallons each (so a total of 100-300 gallons). In Europe they have smaller tanks, in Australia they can have much larger tanks and I've seen some "road trains" with like 4 massive fuel tanks (2 on each side).
an 18 wheeler does not use gas.it uses diesel.now the tanks can hold anywhere from 60 gallons to 200 gallons each most trucks have a tank on each side so if they are 200 gallon tanks, the 18 wheeler can carry 400 gallons of fuel when full All new trucks are equipped with dual fuel tanks for balance--if you had only one tank the truck's steering would be different with a full tank than with an empty one. They come in three sizes: 100 gallons, 150 gallons and 200 gallons. Fleet drivers' trucks have 100-gallon tanks, and we refuel every day. Independents usually run 200-gallon tanks, but I think if I had my own rig I'd have 100-gallon tanks.
30 gallons per tank.
As much as the fuel tanks it came with were designed to hold. It's not a universal thing. I've driven trucks which held as little as 70 gallons, and trucks which held as much as 300 gallons. For an over-the-road truck, 240 gallons seems to be pretty standard fare.
The external tanks can contain up to 534,900 US gallons of propellant. The shuttle has two of these.
Most home electrical hot water tanks will hold 40 gallons.