Water use in a show er depends on the duration of the shower. A n answe can only be provided in gpm.
Present American national energy policy act (EPAct) standards mandate that all showerheads manufactured in the U.S. have a maximum flow rate of 2.5 gpm (9.5 Lpm). While some exceed this others use 1.5 gpm or less (5.7 Lpm).
In the past many showerheads exceeded 5 GPM (18.9 LPM).
The rate of flow is 50 gallons per minute. This is calculated by dividing the total gallons pumped (750 gallons) by the time taken to pump (15 minutes).
QF = V / t = 80 gal / 16/3 min = 15 GPM<-----------------------------
A ten minute shower can use less water than a full bath. With a new 2.5 gallon-per-minute (low-flow) shower head, a 10-minute shower will use about 25 gallons of water, saving you five gallons of water over a typical bath. A new showerhead also will save energy — up to $145 each year on electricity — beating out both the bath and an old-fashioned showerhead. To avoid moisture problems, control humidity in your bathroom by running your ventilating fan during and 15 minutes after showers and baths.
15 gallons is 56,781.18 milliliters.
15 gallons 15 gallons
although there are different size baths the usual sized bath is 15 litres
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 :)
15 liters is 3.96 US gallons.
15 gallons or 57 liters.15 gallons or 57 liters.
Formula: quarts per minute x 15 = gallons per hour
15 GALLONS
15 gallons