Don't waste too much time searching, because there's no such formula.
"Feet" is a unit of length or distance, whereas "gallon" is a unit of volume.
If length could be changed into volume, you'd be able to figure out how many
gallons tall you are.
TEDTalks - 2006 Arthur Benjamin's Formula for Changing Math Education was released on: USA: February 2009
1 US gallon = 0.133680556 Cubic Feet (ft3); and 1 day = 24 hours = 1,440 Minutes. Math equation for conversion where "x=number of gallons per day" is: (x / 1440) x 0.133680556 Example: If x=30 (gallons per day), then: 0.208333 x 0.133680556 = 2.785 ft3 per Minute.
3.35 feet 18 x 18 x 3.35 x 5.9 = 6403 gallons
miles per hour x 88 = feet per minute
7.103 gallons. 220 The question used the word around instead of diameter. I failed to carry a naught in my first answer, but I think the answer to his question would be 22 Gallons. PS, I'm no math major.
Almost 5,000 gallons. Slightly less. Your dimensions are 648 cubic feet. 1 cubic foot is about 7.5 gallons of water. So do the math and that's about 4, 860 gallons.
While I'm sure it is possible to stack a number of gallons of liquid along something that is 1144 ft. long, this is not going to work as a math problem if it compares gallons (a liquid measure) with feet ( a unit of distance).
So this is a volume, and if it is a rectangular box or shape, the math is just 40x20x1, which is 800 cubic ft
i dont know how many gallons of gas it holds but i do know that it burns 2 gallons per minute and, at full speed, it will run out of gas in 15 minutes maybe there is some sort of math formula in there :)
Oh, dude, let me put on my math hat for a sec. So, to calculate the volume of a cylinder (which is what we're dealing with here), you use the formula V = πr^2h. With a 15-foot diameter, the radius is 7.5 feet. Plugging in those numbers, you get a volume of around 1,060 cubic feet, which is roughly 7,930 gallons. So, like, get ready to fill up that bad boy with a whole lot of water.
Ummmmmmmmm I'm not too sure I'm bad at math.
It is 5 feet - whether or not in math.