Oh, what a delightful question! Well, it all depends on the size of the jelly beans. You see, some jelly beans are big and some are small, just like the happy little clouds in our painting. Why not try filling the container with jelly beans one by one, enjoying the process like a gentle brushstroke on a canvas? Remember, there are no mistakes, just happy accidents.
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1 gallon = 231 cubic in
231 x (2.54)3 = 3785.4 cm3
so guessing that a jellybean is about 1 cm3 means that there would be 3785 jelly beans.
1. Fill the 2 gallon container with water. 2. Pour all the water in the 2 gallon container into the 3 gallon container. 3. Refill the 2 gallon container 4. Fill the 3 gallon container the rest of the way with the 2 gallon container. You will have 1 gallon left in the 2 gallon container without using the 5 gallon container. P.S Whose bomb are you trying to defuse?
you fill the 7 gallon jug and then place the water into the 5 gallon jug. You will end up with 2 gallons because you subtracted 5 gallons, place that water somewhere else and repeat the process.
It is 60 pints per minutes.
Several ways:# If the pool is full, you could empty it with a measuring container, preferably marked in gallons, and make a note of how many gallons you take out # If the pool is empty you could fill it with water, taking a note of how many gallons of water you put in. # You could use a 'pool capacity calculator' (Try a pool manufacturer's website). # You could calculate its capacity (Area of a circle times depth) This will give you its cubic capacity. Then find out the cubic size of a gallon. Then divide the pool's capacity by the cubic size of a gallon. The answer will be how many gallons.
700 gal/ 20 min = 35 gallons/ 1 min * 60 min/ 1 hour= 2100 gallons per hour.