It is: 6*10*5 = 300 cubic feet
Cylinder tank: Volume=(pi)*(radius)^2*(height)= about 25.12 cubic feet rectangular prism tank= (width)*(length)*(depth)= 16 cubic feet
That's going to depend on the shape of the container, especially on how much 'real estate' the base of the container covers. For discussion, imagine that the container is a square fish tank, and the four walls go straight up from the four sides of the square base. -- If the base of the tank covers 64 square feet and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 1 foot deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 acre and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 0.0176 inch deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 square inch and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 9,216 feet (1.745 mile) deep.
Assuming 11 feet is the diameter of the tank, the volume will be 11 times pi times 2, in cubic feet. That equals 69.115 cubic feet (rounded to 3 decimals), which equals 517.016 gallons.
That is why i dont have fish
(Length of the tank, in feet) x (Width of the tank, in feet) x (Height of the tank, in feet).
Cylinder tank: Volume=(pi)*(radius)^2*(height)= about 25.12 cubic feet rectangular prism tank= (width)*(length)*(depth)= 16 cubic feet
27 inches deep.
35 cubic feet
A tank with these dimensions has a volume of 150 cubic feet or 1,122.08 gallons.
328,320 cubic inches
That's going to depend on the shape of the container, especially on how much 'real estate' the base of the container covers. For discussion, imagine that the container is a square fish tank, and the four walls go straight up from the four sides of the square base. -- If the base of the tank covers 64 square feet and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 1 foot deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 acre and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 0.0176 inch deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 square inch and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 9,216 feet (1.745 mile) deep.
We need 3 measurements to calculate volume.
Assuming 11 feet is the diameter of the tank, the volume will be 11 times pi times 2, in cubic feet. That equals 69.115 cubic feet (rounded to 3 decimals), which equals 517.016 gallons.
That is why i dont have fish
A 44-inch diameter 500 cubic Imperial gallon cylindrical tank is 47.4 feet long.
(Length of the tank, in feet) x (Width of the tank, in feet) x (Height of the tank, in feet).
82 inches = 6.83 (2DP) A tank which is 3ft wide, 2ft deep and 82 inches long can hold 306.1206 Gallons. Just for interest, the tank would of been 40.98 cubic feet.