Breaking it up into a rectangular and triangular prism, it is:
30*15*3 + 0.5*30*15*2 = 1800 cubic feet
This converts to 13,465 US gallons, or 50,970 Litres.
This is an approximation that assumes the water comes right to the brim of the pool, and that the floor of the pool is a constant diagonal. But it should be pretty accurate.
There are 7,985.76 gallons of water in a 1799.5 cubic feet pool.
A pool measuring 10'x15'x52" holds approximately 3,944 gallons of water.
The pool holds approximately 10,560 gallons of water.
For a 4500 gallon pool, you will need about 1 gallon of liquid chlorine to raise the chlorine level by 1 ppm. The amount of liquid chlorine required will depend on the current chlorine level in the pool and your desired level.
To calculate the volume of water needed to raise the level of the pool by 1 inch, you can use the formula: Volume = Length x Width x Height. Convert the dimensions to feet and calculate the volume accordingly. For a 16x32 pool and raising the level by 1 inch, you would need approximately 133.33 gallons of water.
357 gallons
This pool holds a maximum of 18,560 gallons of water.
7,480.52 gallons for every inch of depth
1,770 gallons 10x10x3x5.9=
17,000 gallons
depends on how deep it is
10,408 US gallons.
8 gallons
478.75 gallons for each inch of water depth.
a 27 foot round by 52 inch deep pool holds 18,550 gallons of water
3,231.5844
359 gallons for every inch the water is deep.