1000 litres
3 types of containers- 20' Dry Container with capacity 33 cubic meter, 40' Dry Container with capacity 68 cubic meter,40' High Cube Dry Container with capacity 76 cubic meter
-- milliliter -- liter -- cubic centimeter -- cubic meter
Mass . . . kilogram Capacity . . . cubic meter
In the metric system, there is no difference between liquid capacity and capacity of anything else. The cubic meter is the unit for capacity, although for smaller capacities/volumes the liter which is 1/1000th of a cubic meter can be used.
That is not possible. A triangle is an area. Cubic meters belong to volume or capacity.
If you mean engine capacity it is 1898cc.
68 cubic meters
I assume that with "capacity" you mean the measurement that is officially known as "volume". The standard unit of volume is the cubic meter. The liter (1/1000 of a cubic meter) and the milliliter = cubic centimeter (1/1000 of a liter) are also often used.
If you mean capacity in the sense of volume, the main unit would of course be the cubic meter; other units used include cubic decimeters (equal to liters), cubic centimeters, cubic millimeters.
To convert the capacity of an LNG carrier from cubic meters to cubic feet, you would multiply the number of cubic meters by 35.3147. Therefore, for a carrier with 160,000 cubic meters of capacity, the conversion would be 160,000 * 35.3147 = 5,650,352 cubic feet.
1,000 liters = 1 cubic meter
( 1 ) divided by (the capacity, in cubic meters, of the wheelbarrow you're using)