$3.15 per/hour I just did calculation based on: -- City water price of 0.015 cents per gallon of water (water & sewer) -- A GPM rating of 3.5 gallons per minute on the single sprinkler --TOTAL it costs me $3.15 per hour to run a single standard hose-type sprinkler **note: there is a large variation of in garden sprinklers. Some have GPM of 0.5 all the way up to 8. Average sprinklers run 3-4 GPM. I split the difference of the average.
"The average sprinkler will use in excess of 240 gallons of water per hour" also refer to http://www.libertylake.org/water_conservation.htm for watering guide. As a useful gauge: A garden hose with no nozzle attached, will spew out as much as 350 gallons per hour. So 240 sounds about right for a sprinkler system, keeping in mind that it will vary with your local water pressure and type of sprinkler system that you have. If your system has a damaged sprinkler head, you might as well be running that garden hose full blast. My sprinkler system uses 1,000 gallons in a three hour time cycle. I have six or seven zones. I suspect some of my heads are busted, since that sounds about like "garden hose figures." (333 gallons per hour)
The gallons per hour that come out of a hose depends upon two things: the diameter of the hose, and the water pressure. Since both of these vary, there is no single answer to that question. However, a one inch diameter garden hose at an average household water pressure could be expected to yield about 200 gallons per hour, in my estimation. Your mileage may vary.
On average a Caterpillar Track Excavator 320 BL will consume about 10 gallons of fuel per hour. On an average eight hour workday, it will consume 80 gallons of fuel.
200 gallons
You first need to know what your average speed is to determine how many miles have been traveled
That really depends on what fluid is being forced through the pipe. If it's 5,000 gallons of single malt scotch per hour, the pressure is relatively low. If it's 5,000 gallons of molasses per hour, the pressure is relatively more higher.
Aproximately 0.8 gallons per hour is the average. Although all cars will be a little different.
About 171.6 gallons per hour.
700 gal/ 20 min = 35 gallons/ 1 min * 60 min/ 1 hour= 2100 gallons per hour.
18.75 gallons per hour.
Cubic feet per hour x 7.48 = gallons per hour