254 GPM
It should state the gallons per minute on a label attached to the pump, or on the pump maker's website. To experiment yourself, would involve pumping a measured number of gallons using a stop watch!
There are 103 seconds in 1 minute, 43 seconds since there are 60 seconds in a minute
60 seconds are in a minute!
There are 60 seconds in a minute
There are 60 seconds in a minute
It should state the gallons per minute on a label attached to the pump, or on the pump maker's website. To experiment yourself, would involve pumping a measured number of gallons using a stop watch!
Find the diameter of the pipe and the pressure and its all simple math after that
You can indeed figure this out using hydraulics formulas. However, a simpler solution. Run the water into a 5 gallon bucket, and time how long it takes to fill the bucket in seconds. Use this formula: Gallons per minute = 300 / TimeToFillBucket
There is no way of knowing with out knowing whats pumping it and at what pressure.
Gallons per minute is the amount of gallons used or moved or saved for every minute of time that passes. If you wanted to calculate how many gallons were pumped through a water fountain every minute, you would measure this and divide the gallons by the minutes and get your "gallons per minute".
The angular velocity of a wheel taking 45 seconds to rotate once is 2 2/3 pi radians per minute. The diameter of the wheel does not matter in this case.
30 seconds in half a minute (there are 60 seconds in a minute)
No minute has. A minute is defined as 60 seconds,so an interval that lasts 89 seconds is no minute.
There are 103 seconds in 1 minute, 43 seconds since there are 60 seconds in a minute
60 seconds are in a minute!
There are 60 seconds in a minute
There are 60 seconds in a minute