1 liter
you use the 4 litre bucket to feel the 9 litre bucket then empty the 9 when it is full till you end up with 6 in it as follows you put 2 buckets of 4 into 9 then 1 litre from 4 to fill 9 then empty 9 put remaining 3 into 9 put 4 more in then 2 to fill 9 and empty put remaining 2 in then 4 more giving you 6 litres ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- My way: (Mechanical Engineering Student) Take the 9l bucket filled to capacity and use it to fill the 4l bucket twice leaving you with 1l remaining in the 9l bucket. Next, pour that 1l into the 4l bucket. Fill the 9l to capacity again. Using the 9l bucket fill the 4l bucket to capacity leaving you with 6l total in the 9l bucket.
x/4-x/3=4 x=48 liters
The best device to use to measure the capacity of a bucket is a measuring cup. After the measurement is made, the result can be expressed in any unit of volume, although some units will result in numbers that are inconveniently large or small. Probably the most convenient numbers will be associated with liters, quarts, or gallons. And none of this depends on what's in the bucket, or on its intended use.
There is no standard size of bucket; the number of millilitres which fit in a given bucket vary from bucket to bucket.
How large is the bucket? I would suggest pouring water in to find out.
The bucket has a capacity of 10 litres.(Correct spelling is capacIty)
1 liter
Around 95 cups
That is 9,700 ml.
In general and easy terms, Struck Capacity is the capacity of material present in a bucket of any Excavating Equipment.
Starting from 8 lit upto 25 lit capacity buckets are available.
5 gallons
83.4 lbs - excluding the weight of the bucket !
It all really depends on what size the bucket is that's holding the ice. You would have to find the capacity of the bucket first.
The capacity of a pail (bucket) is usually given in litres. The capacity of older buckets still in use might be in imperial gallons.
Assuming all three are relatively normal compared to each other (large bath, medium bucket and small bottle), then the bath will hold a good deal more fluid than either the bucket or the medicine bottle, and therefore has the largest capacity. However, if capacity is measured against the amount of fluid they already contain and they're all full, then they all have the same capacity: none at all.