Approximately 0.134 cubic feet per gallon.
There are 7.48052 gallons of water in a cubic foot... I'm not too sure about gasoline.
1 gallon of space = 0.13368 cubic foot (rounded)
Regardless of what's in it.
Even if it's empty.
7.48 gallons / cubic foot
1 cubic foot = 6.23 Imperial gallons.
1 gallon = 0.1337 cubic foot (rounded) 1 cubic foot = 7.4805 gallons (rounded)
it depends on the car
One cubic foot of diesel fuel is equal to 7.4805 U.S. gallons of diesel fuel. There are 3.7854 liters per U.S. gallon. Therefore, one cubic foot of diesel fuel is equal to 28.32 liters.V = ( 1.0 ft^3 ) ( 7.4805 gal / ft^3 ) ( 3.7854 L / gal ) = 28.32 L
Yes
2/1/12th GALLON
115502.6 cubic inches
its very flamable
yes, the blubber you have to burn and you get the fuel
According to the owners manual, the 2004 F150 regular cab with 8 foot box comes STANDARD with a 27 U.S. gallon ( 102.1 liter ) fuel tank and there is an OPTIONAL 35.7 U.S. gallon ( 135 liter ) fuel tank available
That depends on the car's rate of fuel consumption, commonly known as the gas mileage. If we assume a gas mileage of 20 miles per gallon, divide that by 4546 cubic centimeters per gallon, then multiply by 5280 feet per mile, we get about 23.2 feet per cubic centimeter.
A cubic foot is a cubic foot is a cubic foot... If you are referring to ask for a given equal mass of water and diesel fuel: The specific gravity of #2 diesel fuel is about 0.89, depending on the quality. The specific gravity of a liquid is the ratio of it's density to that of water. Since the specific gravity of diesel is less than one, it is less dense than water. Conversely, diesel is more voluminous than water. It will float on top of it. The answer to this question is that for an equal mass of water and diesel the latter will occupy more volume.
1 cubic meter of any substance is 264.171549479 gallons. See related link for a handy unit converter. Note. Most countries now use S.I (commonly called the Metric system). Of those who still use gallons, almost all use the Imperial ( aka British ) gallon. This is easily defined as the volume occupied by ten pounds of water at standard temperature. A cubic meter holds almost exactly 220 of these gallons. The first answer given above refers to a US gallon, which is about 17% smaller.