Want this question answered?
Let me try and give you a hint. There is something called fluid flow formula. You basically need to know the speed at which the water is flowing and (in this case) the hose length and diameter. Well, it depends on how fast the water is running. Get a clock. Start filling a 10 liter bucket and stop after one minute. Is the bucket full (10 liters per minute), or half full (5 liters per minute)? Or did the bucket fill in half a minute (20 liters per minute)? The answer is in your hands (or in your bucket).
Can't say because this depends on the flow coming out of the shower head. If the flow is 1ltr per minute then in 10 minutes you will use 10 litres The average shower in the US flows at a rate of 7.9 liters per minute, or 2.1 gallons per minute. A ten minute shower would consume 79 liters or 21 gallons of water.
There is no way to tell as the rate of flow is only partially influenced by pressure and there are many other contributing factors such as the diameter of a pipe or the viscosity of a liquid.
cubic feet per hour (cu ft/h of flow rate) is the same as 14 4/25 Liters per minute (L/min / flow rate).
A cubic foot per minute is a measure of flow whereas a litre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and so there is no conversion between the two without additional information.
Voltage
4 liters per 25 seconds = 9.6 liters/minute
Let me try and give you a hint. There is something called fluid flow formula. You basically need to know the speed at which the water is flowing and (in this case) the hose length and diameter. Well, it depends on how fast the water is running. Get a clock. Start filling a 10 liter bucket and stop after one minute. Is the bucket full (10 liters per minute), or half full (5 liters per minute)? Or did the bucket fill in half a minute (20 liters per minute)? The answer is in your hands (or in your bucket).
The quauntity in liters is five times the water flow rate in liter/minute.
Can't say because this depends on the flow coming out of the shower head. If the flow is 1ltr per minute then in 10 minutes you will use 10 litres The average shower in the US flows at a rate of 7.9 liters per minute, or 2.1 gallons per minute. A ten minute shower would consume 79 liters or 21 gallons of water.
liters per minute
what is the discharge flow of 10m/s passing from 2ft pipe
Water flow regards the quantity of this fluid medium per a unit of time. In SI units it would be liters per second (lps), and in American it is commonly measured in gallons per minute (gpm).
5 imperial gallons per minute
This question is not specific enough to answer. If we knew which type of flow rate you were speaking of we could answer this. For example there is a volumetric flow rate which is the volume of fluid that passes through any given surface per unit time.
Assuming that the pressure remains at a constant, reducing the diameter of the pipe will increase the water flow. On the contrary, increasing the diameter would cause the water to flow at a much slower rate.
There is no way to tell as the rate of flow is only partially influenced by pressure and there are many other contributing factors such as the diameter of a pipe or the viscosity of a liquid.