The volume of a quarter is 808.53 mm3 (ml)
5 gallon [US, dry] = 22,024,419 cubic millimeter
Thus 22,024,419/808.53 = 27240 quarters.
There are lots of ways to do this, but here's one: Fill the 5 gallon jug to the top. Pour the water from the 5 gallon jug to the 3 gallon jug until the 3 gallon jug is full. What's left in the 5 gallon jug is 5 - 3 = 2 gallons. Dump what's in the 3 gallon jug. Put the 2 gallons from the larger jug into the smaller jug. Now fill the 5 gallon jug. You'll have 5 + 2 = 7 gallons, as needed.
One gallon of water weighs 8 pounds. So, if you were putting water into the gallon jug, you could put 8 pounds of water in it. Different liquids will have different densities, and therefore be quite different in weight.
depends on how fast you put your change in
i would say a maximum of 500 dollars
Well, honey, it's simple math. Fill up the 9 gallon container, pour it into the 4 gallon container until it's full, leaving you with 5 gallons in the 9 gallon container. Then empty out the 4 gallon container, pour the remaining 5 gallons from the 9 gallon container into the 4 gallon container, and finally fill up the 9 gallon container again. Voila, you've got yourself 6 gallons of water!
you don't even make sense, you have no friends 4 quarts to a gallon idiot 4 quarters to one dollar you can put like a thousand quarters in a gallon jug
There are lots of ways to do this, but here's one: Fill the 5 gallon jug to the top. Pour the water from the 5 gallon jug to the 3 gallon jug until the 3 gallon jug is full. What's left in the 5 gallon jug is 5 - 3 = 2 gallons. Dump what's in the 3 gallon jug. Put the 2 gallons from the larger jug into the smaller jug. Now fill the 5 gallon jug. You'll have 5 + 2 = 7 gallons, as needed.
One gallon of water weighs 8 pounds. So, if you were putting water into the gallon jug, you could put 8 pounds of water in it. Different liquids will have different densities, and therefore be quite different in weight.
Fill the 3 gallon jug to the top and pour it into the 5 gallon jug. Fill the 3 gallon jug again and pour it into the 5 gallon jug until it is full, leaving 1 gallon in the 3 gallon jug. Empty the 5 gallon jug and pour the 1 gallon from the 3 gallon jug into the 5 gallon jug. Fill the 3 gallon jug and pour it into the 5 gallon jug to get 4 gallons of water in the 5 gallon jug.
depends on how fast you put your change in
i would say a maximum of 500 dollars
Well, honey, it's simple math. Fill up the 9 gallon container, pour it into the 4 gallon container until it's full, leaving you with 5 gallons in the 9 gallon container. Then empty out the 4 gallon container, pour the remaining 5 gallons from the 9 gallon container into the 4 gallon container, and finally fill up the 9 gallon container again. Voila, you've got yourself 6 gallons of water!
supplies needed: 8 oranges(it can be other fruit to), 1 cup of sugar, 1 gallon jug, 6 slices of bread, a smal bowl with some water in it. step 1- put oranges in blender or you can smash it up your self. step 2- take the bread one by one and soak it into the water and drain the water you soaked the bread with back into the bowl( you do this because it exracts the yeast from the bread) do this 2 times per slice of bread. step 3- pour the cup of sugar into the gallon jug, then put 16 oz. of hot water into the jug. step 4- put the oranges you mashed up from step 1 into the jug step 5- pour the yeast extract from the bread into the jug. step 6- put enough water to fill the rest of the jug up and stir this all together. step 7- put the lid on and let it ferment for 5 days BE SURE TO UNSCREW THE CAP EVERY 6 HOURS AS IF YOU DONT AND LEAVE IT ALONE IT WILL EXPLODE. step 7- get drunk on day 5
just 50w gear oil get it in a gallon jug with a pump makes it easieer to put in than with the quart bottles
Use 1.28 fluid ounces in one gallon.
fill a jug with water right to the top. put the jug in a bucket. put the clover in the water and let some of the water spill out. then measure how much water fell out of the jug by dumping the water that is now in the bucket into a measuring bowl. look at how many milliliters that have spilled out. say you have twenty of them, you would just change the milliliters to cm cubed so it would be(for example) 20cm cubed. fill a jug with water right to the top. put the jug in a bucket. put the clover in the water and let some of the water spill out. then measure how much water fell out of the jug by dumping the water that is now in the bucket into a measuring bowl. look at how many milliliters that have spilled out. say you have twenty of them, you would just change the milliliters to cm cubed so it would be(for example) 20cm cubed. fill a jug with water right to the top. put the jug in a bucket. put the clover in the water and let some of the water spill out. then measure how much water fell out of the jug by dumping the water that is now in the bucket into a measuring bowl. look at how many milliliters that have spilled out. say you have twenty of them, you would just change the milliliters to cm cubed so it would be(for example) 20cm cubed.
one