1000 litres
this is the formula:V=2(3.1416)rxhjust try to convert first the diameter into meter then divide it into two to get the radius
To store 1000 liters of water, you typically need a tank with a volume of 1 cubic meter, since 1 cubic meter equals 1000 liters. The area required will depend on the tank's shape. For example, a cylindrical tank with a diameter of 1 meter and a height of approximately 1 meter would occupy about 0.79 square meters of floor area, while a rectangular tank could have varied dimensions but would similarly require a comparable area.
96 litres.
Well, darling, if the tank has sides of 5 meters, then it's a simple calculation to find the volume of the cube - just multiply 5 by 5 by 5. That gives you 125 cubic meters. And since 1 cubic meter is equal to 1000 liters, you're looking at a grand total of 125,000 liters of water in that bad boy. Cheers to staying hydrated!
6 times 950 liters / 150 liters = 6.33 times = 6
Assuming a cuboud tank, 1x1.5x2.5 is 3.75m3. This is 3750 litres
1 cubic meter is 1000 liters, so 48 m³ is 48000 liters.
You need length , width and depth to be able to tell volume.
A 2400 cubic meter tank will hold up to 2.4 million liters.
That is two dimensions. You need three dimensions for a volume calculation.
26500 liters
1,500 liters.
this is the formula:V=2(3.1416)rxhjust try to convert first the diameter into meter then divide it into two to get the radius
About 2,422 liters.
Tank holds 55 liters.
57 liters.
You haven't stated dimension units. Convert them to cm, multiply them by each other and then divide by 1000