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.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? Okay, so first we gotta find the volume of that space, which is 20 x 10 x 4 = 800 cubic feet. Then we convert that to gallons, which is like 7.48 gallons per cubic foot, so it's 800 x 7.48 = 5984 gallons. So yeah, that space would hold about 5984 gallons. Cool, right?