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.
10,000 dollars
650
A 5-gallon jug can hold approximately 18.9 liters of liquid. Since 1 US quarter has a volume of approximately 0.069 cubic inches, you can calculate that a 5-gallon jug can hold around 3,721 quarters. Therefore, it would take approximately $930.25 in quarters to fill a 5-gallon jug.
i just emptied one the other day and bought it to the bank...$3748 total
A quarter is 808.5 mm3. If you melted the quarters into a slurry, and poured that into the barrel, you could fit 208 million/808.5 = 257,000 quarters into a 55 gallon drum. If you want to preserve them whole, this becomes a stacking problem. There will be spaces between the quarters, and we would have to estimate how much space is wasted. Just drawing packed circles on a piece of paper I'd guess perhaps 10% of the volume would be air, so deducting 25,000 quarters from our solid mass gives a ballpark estimate of 225,000 quarters.
10,000 dollars
A 5-gallon water jug can hold approximately 18,927 cubic centimeters of volume. The volume of a quarter is approximately 808 cubic millimeters. By converting the volume of the water jug to cubic millimeters, we can determine that it would take approximately 23,440 quarters to fill up the jug. This would amount to $5,860 in quarters.
650
About $4000 worth.
A 5-gallon jug can hold approximately 18.9 liters of liquid. Since 1 US quarter has a volume of approximately 0.069 cubic inches, you can calculate that a 5-gallon jug can hold around 3,721 quarters. Therefore, it would take approximately $930.25 in quarters to fill a 5-gallon jug.
4 quarters
i just emptied one the other day and bought it to the bank...$3748 total
A quarter is 808.5 mm3. If you melted the quarters into a slurry, and poured that into the barrel, you could fit 208 million/808.5 = 257,000 quarters into a 55 gallon drum. If you want to preserve them whole, this becomes a stacking problem. There will be spaces between the quarters, and we would have to estimate how much space is wasted. Just drawing packed circles on a piece of paper I'd guess perhaps 10% of the volume would be air, so deducting 25,000 quarters from our solid mass gives a ballpark estimate of 225,000 quarters.
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.