0.05 cubic meters.
A box measuring 1 meter on each side has a volume of 1 cubic meter. Since 1 cubic meter is equivalent to 1,000 liters, the box can hold up to 1,000 liters of liquid.
A 2400 cubic meter tank will hold up to 2.4 million liters.
It depends of course a bit on the size of the wheelbarrow and on how high you want to pile up the sand. But a typical wheelbarrow might hold about 85 liters of sand. 1 cubic meter equals 1,000 liters. So you would need about 12 wheelbarrow loads to get 1 cubic meter.
A cubic meter tank can hold exactly 1,000 liters of water, as one cubic meter is equivalent to 1,000 liters. This means that the tank can store a volume of water equal to the dimensions of the tank, which is a cube measuring one meter on each side. Therefore, if the tank is completely filled, it will contain 1,000 kilograms of water, assuming the water density is 1 kg/L.
An 1800cc pan can hold up to 1.8 liters of water. (divide cubic centimeters by 1,000 to get liters)
A cube with each side measuring 1 meter in length will have a volume of 1 cubic meter.
105ft³ = 2,973.3L
9 Acres = 36,421.7 square meters. 4 feet = 1.2 meters. Area x length = volume; 36,421.7 x 1.2 = 43,706 cubic meters. Cubic meters is a volume, which can be converted to liters, 1 cubic meter is 1000 liters. So your pond has 43,706,000 Liters. 1 gallon is 3.78 liters, so divide by 3.78 and your pond has 11,545,903.7 Gallons.
A pool with a volume of 157.00 cubic feet can hold a maximum of about 1,174.4 US gallons (977.9 UK gallons) or 4,445.7 liters.
To calculate the volume of water that 1 meter of a 54mm diameter pipe can hold, first find the radius (27mm or 0.027m) and use the formula for the volume of a cylinder: ( V = \pi r^2 h ). Plugging in the values, the volume is approximately ( V = \pi (0.027)^2 (1) ), which equals about 0.0023 cubic meters or 2.3 liters. Thus, 1 meter of 54mm pipe will hold approximately 2.3 liters of water.
To visualize 3 cubic meters, imagine a box 1 meter wide, 1 meter high and 3 meters long .
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.