The exact amount of diesel that a 1 cubic yard tank can hold will depend on the density of the diesel fuel. On average, a cubic yard of diesel fuel can weigh around 1,940 pounds, which is roughly equivalent to 231 gallons or 873 liters.
You can't. One is a measure of length. The other is a measure of volume. You can't go from one to another. Now, if you are talking about 35.5 cubic inches, then we have the ability to convert. 35.5 in³ = 0.153679 gallons
The Gulfstream G200 has a capacity of approximately 7,790 pounds of fuel, which is roughly 1,190 gallons.
To convert pounds to gallons for diesel fuel, you need to know the density. On average, 1 gallon of diesel fuel weighs about 7 pounds. Therefore, 207,538 pounds of diesel fuel would be approximately 29,648 gallons (207,538 pounds / 7 pounds per gallon).
A 1995 Honda Accord V6 typically holds around 17.1 gallons of fuel.
About 1,122.1 gallons.
201.97 US gallons
40.544 gallons
The volume is pi*radius2*depth of fuel = 22.6 cubic feet = 140.9 Imperial gallons, approx.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080807133107AAPCi93
Approximately 0.134 cubic feet per gallon.
The exact amount of diesel that a 1 cubic yard tank can hold will depend on the density of the diesel fuel. On average, a cubic yard of diesel fuel can weigh around 1,940 pounds, which is roughly equivalent to 231 gallons or 873 liters.
The tank will hold a maximum of 478.753 gallons of fuel.
There will be about 5757 US gallons in a full tank of this size. A cylinder's volume is the area of the base times its height. The area of the base is pi times the square of the radius of that base. A radius is half a diameter. Half of 7 feet is 3 1/2 feet. If we take pi times the square of that, we'll get about 38.48 square feet. Multiply that by the 20 foot length and you'll get about 769.6 cubic feet. There are about 7.5 gallons in a cubic foot of water. Multiply the 769.6 feet3 (the volume) by 7.5 gallons/foot3 and there's the (approximately) 5757 gallons (US) in that tank.
1 cubic meter of any substance is 264.171549479 gallons. See related link for a handy unit converter. Note. Most countries now use S.I (commonly called the Metric system). Of those who still use gallons, almost all use the Imperial ( aka British ) gallon. This is easily defined as the volume occupied by ten pounds of water at standard temperature. A cubic meter holds almost exactly 220 of these gallons. The first answer given above refers to a US gallon, which is about 17% smaller.
Possibly 10 X 10 X 10 cubic gallons, but more likely closer to 5 X 10 X 20 cubic gallons. Any combination of numbers that will mutiply together and make 1000 cubic gallons.
6 * 6 * 12 = 432. 432 cubic feet = 3231.6 gallons It's pretty heavy; 26919.228 pounds, at "standard temperature and pressure".