that depends on the circumference of the tank
(30,000 cm3) / (100 cm per meter)3 = 0.03 cubic meter
To give you an idea, a container with a volume of 180 cubic meters could hold up to about 47,550 gallons of water; more than most residential swimming pools.
I presume a mega-litre is 10^6 liters. By definition, a litre is 1000 cubic centimetres -- that's a cube ten cm on a side. You can see, then, that one cubic meter would hold one thousand litres. A thousand thousands make a million, so a megalitre would be the same as a thousand cubic meters.
Approximately 15 to 20 cubic meters. Not all 3 ton trucks will be the same size (have the ability to carry the exact same amount/volume of cargo), but one example would be: Cargo body size (mm) = 5400×2298×400 Now, this would give you 4.96 cubic meters, but the 400mm measurement is just the height of the side of the cargo bay area ... in fact, cargo could be stacked probably 4 times that height, giving an effective cargo size/volume of 19.85 cubic meters.
It will hold 538.6 US gallons of water.
Assuming that the 512 cubic centimetres refers to the inside measure then the answer is 512 cubic centimetres, of course! Otherwise the answer depends on the thickness of the container.
300 cubic meters holds 79,251.6 gallons.
0.05 cubic meters.
If the mixer will hold 1,000 kilograms of shelled corn, then it holds approximately 40 bushels. This is approximately 50 cubic feet, or somewhat less than 1.5 cubic meters.
This pipe will hold 706.9 cubic meters of water or 186,700 US gallons.
It will hold 216 cubic metres.
3.5 cubic inches holds 0.015 gallons.
1,100 cubic inches holds 609.5 (609.524) ounces of water.
Well, as an example, a 70-cubic meter container could hold up to about 18,500 gallons of water.
To visualize 3 cubic meters, imagine a box 1 meter wide, 1 meter high and 3 meters long .
To give you an idea, a container with a volume of 180 cubic meters could hold up to about 47,550 gallons of water; more than most residential swimming pools.
A container with a volume of 14.44 cubic feet will hold 108 gallons of water.
A tank that is 6 Meters tall and has a diameter of 10 Meters (5 radius) has a volume in cubic meters of 471 cubic meters.Volume of a cylinder uses the formula: Area of the end X HeightArea = pi(3.14) x R2 = 3.14X52 = 78.5 sq. metersHeight is 6 meters.Volume = 78.5 sq. meters X 6 meters = 471 cubic metersSince there are 264 US. Gallons in 1 Cubic Meter the tank will hold 124,344 Gallons (471 X 264)