They are the same: 1 cubic cm = 1 mL
35.3146667 (cubic feet) per second == Converters: * NOAA: http://www.srh.noaa.gov/wgrfc/resources/convert.html#flow
You can't. Meters per second is a straight off speed, CFM(cubic feet per minute) is a flow rate. You could convert cubic meters/second into CFM though. Here's a link that'll help you with that:http://www.heatsink-guide.com/content.php?content=conversion.shtml
You don't. metres per second measures velocity. litres per second measures flow rate. There is no conversion. Possibly you mean 5.3 cubic metres per second - that's easier. There are 1000 litres in a cubic metre. So its 5300 litres per second. That's the flow rate of a small river. Actually you can convert flow to velocity as long as you know the internal diameter of the pipe. Where Velocity - V = m/s Flow - Q = m3/h (1 L/s = 3.6 m3/h) Diameter - D = Internal Diameter of pipe in mm V = 354 x Q/D2
You cannot. Cubic feet per second is a flow rate measured in terms of volume, while tons per hour is a measure of flow rate in terms of mass. Volume and mass are two different measures and according to basic dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
This is a pretty straightforward conversion. One cubic foot is equal to 7.48 gallons (US). If you take the reciprocal of that figure (1 / 7.48), you can determine how many cubic feet are in one gallon: 0.134. That is, one gallon is equal to 0.134 cubic feet. So, one gallon per minute equals 0.134 cubic feet per minute. But you're not done, yet. Since there are 60 seconds in a minute, you must divide that figure by 60 to determine how many cubic feet flow in just one second. 0.134/60 = 0.00223 = 2.23E-3 cubic feet per second. That's a pretty small number to work with. It might be more useful to convert that to cubic inches per second (although you didn't ask for the answer in those units). Since a cubic foot is equal to 1728 cubic inches, you can multiply the answer above by that number: 2.23E-3 x 1728 = 3.85 cubic inches per second (in3/s).
35.3146667 (cubic feet) per second == Converters: * NOAA: http://www.srh.noaa.gov/wgrfc/resources/convert.html#flow
It is in cubic metres!
You cannot. Cubic metre per second is a measure of flow while cubic decameters is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and it makes no sense to try to convert from one to the other.
Pounds per cubic foot of volume and used to weight the two do not compare.
A 1.5 cubic foot per second flow of water equates to 2,592 cubic inches of flow per second.
You can't. Meters per second is a straight off speed, CFM(cubic feet per minute) is a flow rate. You could convert cubic meters/second into CFM though. Here's a link that'll help you with that:http://www.heatsink-guide.com/content.php?content=conversion.shtml
This question cannot be answered sensibly. A cubic metre per second is a measure of volume flow rate, with dimensions [L3T-1]. A foot per second is a measure of linear flow rate, with dimensions [L1T-1]. Basic dimensional analysis teaches that in most cases you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions without additional information.
You don't. metres per second measures velocity. litres per second measures flow rate. There is no conversion. Possibly you mean 5.3 cubic metres per second - that's easier. There are 1000 litres in a cubic metre. So its 5300 litres per second. That's the flow rate of a small river. Actually you can convert flow to velocity as long as you know the internal diameter of the pipe. Where Velocity - V = m/s Flow - Q = m3/h (1 L/s = 3.6 m3/h) Diameter - D = Internal Diameter of pipe in mm V = 354 x Q/D2
You cannot. Cubic feet per second is a flow rate measured in terms of volume, while tons per hour is a measure of flow rate in terms of mass. Volume and mass are two different measures and according to basic dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
What? Cubic metres per second is a measure of flow rate while a square kilometre is a measure of area. The two measure entirely different things and according to basic dimensional analysis conversion from one to the other is pure nonsense.
It is actually called a cusec (cubic feet per second), not cusic. It is a volumetric unit for measuring the flow of liquids, equal to one cubic foot per second.1 ft3s-1 = 0.028316847m3s-1, 1 ft3s-1 = 1 cusec
65 cubic metre per second