55 gallons
A 55-gallon drum equates to about 7.35 cubic feet of volume.
You pour four gallons into the five gallon drum, and take the ten gallon drum with the other four gallons of oil in that.
Unknown: 55 gal drum is a volume. This is the amount of volume this drum can hold. Gallon is a liquid measure, so, compounded with the fact that you don't know the mass or weight of the wheat, you don't have a dry measure. Are there air pockets? Is the wheat 100% dry? What is the mass of a given sample of wheat? After you answer these questions, just substitute for weight, and you will have your answer.
More data is required. I assume the drum has the form of a cylinder; the volume of a cylinder is calculated as pi x radius squared times height. Different combinations of radios and height can give the same volume.
Fill the 5-gallon drum. Pour the contents into the 3-gallon drum, filling it. Now you have 2 gallons left in the big one.Empty the 3-gallon drum. Pour the 2 gallons into it. At this point there is room for one more gallon.Now refill the 5-gallon drum and pour off as much as it takes to fill up the small one. That means you are removing one gallon.Now you have exactly 4 gallons in the 5-gallon drum.or Fill the 3 gallon drum. Pour the contents into the 5 gallon drum. Refill the the 3 gallon drum and pour the contents into the 5 gallon drum until it is full. Empty the 5 gallon drum. You have 1 gallon left in the 3 gallon drum. Pour the remaining 1 gallon into the 5 gallon drum. Re-fill the 3-gallon drum and pour that into the 5 gallon drum giving you 4 gallons. or Tip the 5 gallon drum and fill it until water is level to both the bottom and spilling out the top; next do the same with the 3 gallon drum; then pour the half full 3 gallon drum into the half full 5 gallon drum, rusulting in 2.5 plus 1.5 equals 4 gallons! orWatch Die Hard 3 for the answer.
It may be nearly impossible to buy. That volume would only be available directly from a manufacture.
Yards are a unit of lineal measurement. -Drums are measured in volume, so there is no correlation here.
This is impossible to answer: miles per gallon is a rate of distance per volume, whereas liters is just a measure of volume. miles per liter? kilometers per liter?
A five-gallon drum can hold up to about 18.927 liters.
A standard 55-gallon drum is equal to 208.2 liters.One standard size of metric "drum" is a plastic one holding 160 liters.This is roughly equal to the "barrel" measurement for oil (42 US gallons, 159 liters) which was the same as the English wine cask known as a tierce.210 litres
A 150-gallon drum contains 0.0036 gallon per cubic inch.