There is no such thing as a "cubic ton". There is the ton as a unit of mass (1 ton = 1000 kg), and there is the cubic meter, a unit of volume.
The gallon is a unit of Volume and the ton is a unit of Mass, so the answer depends on the density of the substance you are measuring.
kl means kiloliter, this is a unit of volume. A ton is a unit of mass. There is no standard conversion from one to the other.
Megaton and ton are different things: megaton is a unit of enery; ton a unit of weight. A megaton is the energy released from detonation of TNT. A ton is 2,000 pounds.
A standard ton of refrigeration is 12,000 BTU/h (3517 W). There for a 2 ton unit is a 24,000 BTU/h unit and a 3 ton unit is a 36,000 BTU/h unit.
3500
Depend on what is the Horse Power of the split unit. For Example 1Hp split unit can go up to 0.2 refrigerant ton maximum. http://weightlosstreatnow.com
A ton of refrigeration is equal to the cooling power of one short ton (2000 pounds or 907 kilograms) of ice melting in a 24-hour period. The value is defined as 12,000 BTU per hour, or 3517 watts. A 2-ton ac represents 7034 watts of power, but a practical unit would require more electrical power than that, maybe 10 kW to be safe.
A watt is a unit of electrical energy. A ton is a measure of physical weight and a ton of lead weighs the same as a ton of feathers. Since the watt does not really have what we think of as "mass", I think the answer has to be "zero tons". I say this because I think a wire with a load of 1 watt or a million watts with weigh the same if measured with a scale.
There is no such thing as a "cubic ton". There is the ton as a unit of mass (1 ton = 1000 kg), and there is the cubic meter, a unit of volume.
PA13NR036-E is a three 930 ton unit.
1 Ton = 3,517.2 Watt
3517
A ton is a unit of mass. An inch is a unit of length. The two units are therefore incompatible.
You can't convert tons to kilometres. A ton is a unit of weight, and a kilometre is a unit of distance.
The gallon is a unit of Volume and the ton is a unit of Mass, so the answer depends on the density of the substance you are measuring.
When talking about refrigeration, a ton is a unit of power. To quote wikipedia:"In North America, a standard ton of refrigeration is 12,000 BTU/h = 200 BTU/min ≈ 3,517 W. This is approximately the power required to melt one short ton (2,000 lb) of ice at 0 °C in 24 hours, thus representing the delivery of 1 ton of ice per day." (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ton)