When filled to 80% water capacity, as recommended, the pool holds approximately:
10'x30" = 915 gal
12'x30" = 1,353 gal
12'x36" = 1,722 gal
15'x36" = 2,561 gal
15'x42" = 3,110 gal
16'x42" = 3,896 gal
18'x36" = 3,735 gal
18'x42" = 4,814 gal
18'x48" = 5,593 gal
24'x48" = 10,103 gal
per intex pools site
18,770 Gallons or round it up to 20,000 for calculation purposes.
Each acre-foot equates to 325,851 US gallons of water so multiply acre-feet by 325,851 to determine fluid gallons.
formula for determining how many gallons in a pool is, length times width times average depth times 7.5 = gallons of water in pool if it round or oval its times 5.9
If rectangular: Lenght X Width X Average Depth X 7.5 = Volume in gallons.
The basic formula to figure water volume or gallons of water for a specific size say 20 x 40 are as follows 20 x 40 = 800 x average depth(say 5') = 4000 x 7.5(gallons per cubic foot) = 30,000 In answer to your question you did not give enough information. Is it 24ft diameter? If so the formula is radius squared x 3.14 x 4(average depth) x 7.5 Or 12 squared(144) x 3.14(452.16) x 4(a.d.)1808.64 x 7.5 = 13,564.8 gallons
How big is the star dust inground swimming pool.
This size pool holds up to about 12,926 gallons of water.
That would depend on the sise of the pool your location and the price of water.
18,770 Gallons or round it up to 20,000 for calculation purposes.
there is 2,025.876 cubic Ft = 15,154.6 gallons, 1 cubic Ft = 7.48059 gallons
what should your psi be around in a inground swimming pool andt it hold 12,000 gallons of water
Using the direct variation formula, time = quantity/rate, we can plug in the values: time = 60 gallons / 5 gallons/minute = 12 minutes. It will take 12 minutes for the pump to remove 60 gallons of water.
Each acre-foot equates to 325,851 US gallons of water so multiply acre-feet by 325,851 to determine fluid gallons.
Go to http://www.havuz.org/pool-calculators.htm
Measure the height of the water column and the diameter of the fountain. Volume = πr2h
You can indeed figure this out using hydraulics formulas. However, a simpler solution. Run the water into a 5 gallon bucket, and time how long it takes to fill the bucket in seconds. Use this formula: Gallons per minute = 300 / TimeToFillBucket
formula for determining how many gallons in a pool is, length times width times average depth times 7.5 = gallons of water in pool if it round or oval its times 5.9