1 hour and a half, or 90 minutes.
1.5 hours
55 minutes
Pump 'A' can fill 1/6 of the tank in one hour. 1/6 is the same as 2/12 Pump 'B' can drain 1/12 of the tank in one hour. If both pumps are running at the same time, then in one hour 2/12 get filled and 1/12 gets drained, and the net effect is 1/12 getting filled in that hour. If the tank is initially empty and both pumps start at the same time, then the tank will fill in 12 hours. *edit* It takes six hours if pump B is left off.
737.5
1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 week = 168 hours → 7 gallon/week = 7 gallon × 4 quarts/gallon ÷ (1 week × 168 hours/week) = 7 × 4 / 168 quarts/hour = 1/6 quarts/hour
1.5 hours
1.5 hours if the rate of flow is constant.
A day or 2 depending on the water pressure
At a rate of 6 gallons an hour, it will take 1000 hours.
15000waypoint / 1600gallons/h = Time9.375 hours
It would take approximately 9 hours, 22 minutes, and 30 seconds to fill a 15,000 gallon pool with a garden house that blasts out 1,600 gallons an hour. But that does not take into account chemical levels. In order to have a safe pool, free of infection-causing bacteria, you would need to adjust the pH level and total alkaline level of your pool.
The donation of the platelets to equal a gallon usually takes one hour. This usually takes place after every three months.
700 gal/ 20 min = 35 gallons/ 1 min * 60 min/ 1 hour= 2100 gallons per hour.
1232/46 mpg = 26.78 gals. needed 27 gals/10 gallon tank= fill up 3 times
58
Depends on water pressure and how many hoses you use. Overnight
55 minutes