To calculate the number of pennies needed to fill a 7-gallon jug, we need to consider the volume of a penny. A penny has a volume of approximately 0.36 cubic centimeters. One gallon is equivalent to approximately 3785 cubic centimeters. Therefore, a 7-gallon jug would have a volume of 26,495 cubic centimeters. Dividing the volume of the jug by the volume of a penny gives us approximately 73,597 pennies needed to fill a 7-gallon jug.
The answer will depend on whether you mean UK pennies and the Imperial gallon or US pennies (which are actually cents) and a measure that is a smaller gallon, or a penny from some other country and yet another arbitrary measure which is called a gallon!
32,000, $320.00
If you divide the volume of the container by the volume of a penny, you get 52,575 pennies, or $525.75. Obviously this is a high estimate considering there will be significant empty space between coins. I think the best way to estimate this without using thousands of coins would be to scale it down. Measure how many pennies it takes to fill up one cup and multiply that by 80 (16 cups in a gallon times 5 gallons). It still won't be perfect, but much more accurate than 52,575.
Assuming the jug is filled to the brim with quarters, each quarter has a value of $0.25. A gallon can hold approximately 3,300 quarters, so a 3-gallon jug would hold around 9,900 quarters. Therefore, the total value of the quarters in the 3-gallon jug would be approximately $2,475.
To calculate the number of pennies needed to fill a 7-gallon jug, we need to consider the volume of a penny. A penny has a volume of approximately 0.36 cubic centimeters. One gallon is equivalent to approximately 3785 cubic centimeters. Therefore, a 7-gallon jug would have a volume of 26,495 cubic centimeters. Dividing the volume of the jug by the volume of a penny gives us approximately 73,597 pennies needed to fill a 7-gallon jug.
mabey 2,000,000
The answer will depend on whether you mean UK pennies and the Imperial gallon or US pennies (which are actually cents) and a measure that is a smaller gallon, or a penny from some other country and yet another arbitrary measure which is called a gallon!
32,000, $320.00
If you divide the volume of the container by the volume of a penny, you get 52,575 pennies, or $525.75. Obviously this is a high estimate considering there will be significant empty space between coins. I think the best way to estimate this without using thousands of coins would be to scale it down. Measure how many pennies it takes to fill up one cup and multiply that by 80 (16 cups in a gallon times 5 gallons). It still won't be perfect, but much more accurate than 52,575.
A 5-gallon Sparkletts bottle can hold about 9795.5 cubic inches. Assuming the average volume of a U.S. coin is about 0.3 cubic inches, you would need approximately 32,652 coins to fill the bottle. The total value would depend on the mix of coins (pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, etc.) and could range from around $326.52 to over $3,265.20.
To fill up a 20-gallon tank at $1.77 per gallon, you would spend 20 gallons x $1.77/gallon = $35.40.
At $3 a gallon, the 13.2 gallon tank of the 2014 Civic would cost $39.60 USD to fill.
Fill the 1 gallon bucket and ignore the other.
Assuming the jug is filled to the brim with quarters, each quarter has a value of $0.25. A gallon can hold approximately 3,300 quarters, so a 3-gallon jug would hold around 9,900 quarters. Therefore, the total value of the quarters in the 3-gallon jug would be approximately $2,475.
1 hour and a half, or 90 minutes.
100 ounces would fill approximately 3 quarts.