it usally rounds up two 1,500 pennies
Roughly $320 worth, that's 32,000 pennies.
$180.00 dollars $140 - assuming you start with an empty tank and finish with an empty tank.
1.5 qt x 1 gal / 4 qt x 231 cu in / gal x 2.543 cm3 / cu in = 1420 cm3
To estimate how many pennies it would take to fill a five-gallon jar, we first need to know the volume of a penny and the volume of the jar. A penny has a diameter of about 1.9 cm and a thickness of about 1.5 mm, giving it a volume of approximately 0.36 cm³. A five-gallon jar holds about 18,927 cm³, so dividing the jar's volume by the volume of a penny suggests it would take roughly 52,600 pennies to fill the jar, accounting for some empty space due to the irregular packing of the coins.
Fill up the 13 gal container and use this to fill up the 5 gal container. Empty the remaining 8 gal into the 24 gal container. Repeat the same process and empty the contents into the 11 gal container. Repeat the same process and you should result in 3 containers with 8 gallons each and a full 5 gal container.
Roughly $320 worth, that's 32,000 pennies.
$180.00 dollars $140 - assuming you start with an empty tank and finish with an empty tank.
about 900lbs empty
1.5 qt x 1 gal / 4 qt x 231 cu in / gal x 2.543 cm3 / cu in = 1420 cm3
it depends on how much gas you got if its empty empty it should take up at least 18-19 gal.
empty?
10 gal i have a 1977 datsun 280z 2+2 and at $3.21 a gal it takes 40 from empty
Fill the 4 gal bucket and empty it into the 7 gal bucket. Fill the 4 gal bucket and then fill the 7 gal bucket from the 4 gal. This leaves 1 Gallon in the 4 gallon bucket. Empty the 7 gallon bucket and pour the gallon from the 4 gal lbucket into it. Fill the 4 gal bucket and pour it into the 7 gal bucket. You then have 5 gallons in the 7 gallon bucket.
Fill the 5 gallon can Empty it into the 3 gallon can....you now have 2 gallons left in the 5 gallon can Empty the 3 gallon can Pour the 2 gallons from the 5 gallon can into the 3 gallon can. Fill the 5 gallon can Pour water from the 5 gallon can into the 3 gallon can until it is full....that will take a further gallon. You now have 4 gallons left in the 5 gallon can. Empty 1 of the 5 gallons. (But how do you know when you have emptied 1 gal???) You fill the 3 gal can and then tip it into the 5 gal can. The fill the 3 gal can again and tip some into the 5 gal can until the 5 gal can is full, you should now have 1 gal in the 3 gal can. Now empty the 5 gal can and put the 1 gal (from the 3 gal can) into the 5 gal can. Fill the 3 gal can again and add that to the 1 gal that is in the 5 gal can. You now have 4 gals in the 5 gal can!
A typical 30-gallon water heater weighs around 120-150 pounds when empty.
12 gal
Fill up the 13 gal container and use this to fill up the 5 gal container. Empty the remaining 8 gal into the 24 gal container. Repeat the same process and empty the contents into the 11 gal container. Repeat the same process and you should result in 3 containers with 8 gallons each and a full 5 gal container.