120.3125 cubic feet
1 inch = 1/12 foot Volume = (45,000 ft2) x (1/12 ft) = 3,750 ft3 = 28,051.95 gallons (rounded)
15000 gallons
4500 gallons
20 gallons
The pool volume is 3.14 x 18 x 18 X 4/4 = 1017 cu ft - that's how much water you will need. 1017 cu ft = 7600 gallons
The Empire State building has 37 million cubic feet of volume which equates to 276,779,220.76 gallons of water.
At 212 degrees Fahrenheit water expands approximately 1700 times it's original volume.Read more: When_water_becomes_steam_how_much_does_it_expand
400 gallons. http://www.treehugger.com/clean-technology/how-many-gallons-of-water-does-it-take-to-make.html
Rate (miles/gal) = distance (miles) / volume (gallons) so Volume (gallons ) = distance / rate if the rate of use age is 20 miles per gallon volume = 1309 / 20 = 65.45 gallons
If u shower for 10 mins. its 50 gallons. Every min. is 5 gallons.
2,072 gallons
100000 Gallons (liquid) of Water takes up - 231000000.00 cubic inches 133680.556000 cubic foot 4951.132000 cubic yards as far as i am aware, whether it is fresh or not makes no difference.
To estimate how much Jell-O would fill a typical kiddie pool, we first need to know the pool's volume. A standard kiddie pool might hold around 200 to 300 gallons of water. Since Jell-O is made by mixing gelatin with water, the volume of prepared Jell-O is approximately equal to the volume of water used. Therefore, it would take about 200 to 300 gallons of Jell-O mixture to fill the kiddie pool, depending on its size.
1 inch = 1/12 foot Volume = (45,000 ft2) x (1/12 ft) = 3,750 ft3 = 28,051.95 gallons (rounded)
Your pool has a volume of 452.4 cu ft and maximum capacity of 3,384.3 gallons.
55 gallons x .2 = 11 gallons.
Take the volume in gallons and multiply by 3.785