Meters.
Meters
You are free to measure the pool with any units of volume that you like, it doesn't have to be cubic feet.
You need three measurements, length, width, and depth, to calculate the volume of the pool
Most pool owners carry chlorine muriatic acid and algaecide. The wisest thing to do however is to take a water sample from about an arms length down in the pool in a cleaned bottle to a pool shop where they can test the water and let you know exactly what you need.
You can, if the water presently in the pool is 'hard' - but be very careful to keep an eye on the Calcium Hardness of the pool water. If you filled a pool with water from the softener, the water would be hungry for calcium and drag it out of the pool walls, making them feel and look like sandpaper. Calcium hardness should be kept within 200-275ppm. best to use regular water for topup and keep the pool water properly balanced (see your local pool store).
Meters
Kilograms.
An olympic sized swimming pool is 50 meter long and 25m wide using 8+2 lanes.
No. I would use linear units if measuring the swim distance or cubic units if measuring the volume of water. Square units might be useful to see how many people could use the pool before it got crowded but that would depend on whether they were there for swimming or splashing about.
If your measurements are in feet, the 288,000 cubic foot pool would hold 2,154,389.61 gallons of water- and it would be rare to find a pool with a uniform depth of 20 feet.
That depends on the size of the pool and how fast the water is running that is filling it.
The length multiplied by the width is the formula for area, squared feet if units of feet are used
volume in units of gallons, liters, cubic feet, cubic meters etc
To calculate the volume of water needed to fill a rectangular pool, multiply the length, width, and depth together. Assuming the depth is 4 feet, the volume of this pool would be 48 ft x 24 ft x 4 ft = 4,608 cubic feet of water.
You haven't provided enough information - what are the units of measurement (24 whats, feet, metres) and how deep is the pool...?
A rectangular pool shape is longer than it is wide. A lap would be comprised of swimming the length of the pool.
For starters you will have to find out how much salt needs to go into your pool You would brobably be best of taking the dimensions of you pool to a pool shop , along with a clean bottle containig a sample of the pools water from about an arms length down. they will be able to test the water and tel you exactly what you require to get the pool going again.