Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.
If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.
Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.
If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.
Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.
If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.
Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.
If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.
To calculate the volume of a swimming pool in cubic feet, you'll need to measure the length, width, and depth of the pool. Once you have these measurements in feet, you can multiply them together to get the volume in cubic feet (Length x Width x Depth). This will give you the total amount of space the pool can hold.
Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.
If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.
The formula for figuring out the amount of gallons is on the back of pool chemical containers. I am not sure what the formula is for an oval. Check here: http://www.poolspa.com/calculator/ If the pool floor slopes uniformly from end to end, the average depth can be found by adding the deepest and shallowest depth measurements and dividing the results by two. If the pool's dimensions are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet. One cubic foot of water equals 7.5 gallons. Example: The water volume of a pool 60 ft. long, 30 ft. wide and that slopes in depth from 3 ft. to 10 ft. is as follows: 30 x 60 x ((10 + 3)/2) = 11,700 cubic ft. of water 11,700 x 7.5 = 87,750 gallons
80,000 millilitres would be 80 litres -- enough for a bathtub but not a swimming pool which would be more likely to hold 80,000 litres or 80 cubic metres of water, equivalent to a pool, say, eight metres long, five metres wide and two metres deep. it depends on how big it is
Assuming the pool is round, you can calculate the volume of water in the pool using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = Οr^2h. Given the diameter (8 ft), the radius is half of that (4 ft). If you know the depth of the pool, you can plug that value in for "h" and calculate the volume of water in the pool in cubic feet.
There are 0.13368 cubic feet in a gallon.
The cubic ft capacity of the Kenmore 596.9535610 refrigerator is approximately 21.9 cubic feet.
The correct answer to your question is "None, because I do not have such a pool." 24 ft * 24 ft * 5 ft = 2880 cubic ft = 81.55 cubic metres, approx.
The width of the swimming pool is 10 ft because 10*(10+10)=200 So the length is 20 ft.
what is the length x width of a rectangle swimming pool that is 13300 sq ft
The Formula RXRX 3.14 pi x average depth= cubic ft x 7.5 gal/cubic ft= gallons in pool 27 ft diameter pool has a radius 13.5. 13.5 x13.5 x 3.14 = 572.27 SQ FT area x4= 2289 cubic ft 2289 cubic ft x 7.5 = 17168 gallons in pool John www.unblockabledraincovers.com
Approximately 20.6697 ft. PYTHAGOREAN THEOREM. FTW.
20 ft
16 ft, possibly!
Your average swimming pool is likely around 20 ft x 30 ft with an average depth of 5 ft (rounding here of course) this would equate to about 22,500 Gallons. 1 cubic foot of water = 7.4805 US Gallons 20 x 30 x 5 x 7.4805 = 22,442
A 20 foot round pool has a radius of 3.2 feet. So the pool has a volume of pi*r2*h = 101.86 cubic ft approx.
The width of the swimming pool is 10 ft because 10*(10+10)=200
you can treat the pool as a circle that is extruded to a height if the diameter is 33ft, then the radius is 16.5ft. volume is pi times radius squared 16.5ft * 16.5ft = 272.25 sq ft pi * 272.5 sq ft = 855.14 sq ft now just multiply 855.14 by the height in feet and you have the volume. For example, 855.14 sq ft * 3 ft = 2565.41 cubic feet now convert cubic feet to gallons: 1 cu ft = 7.4805 gal so 2565.41 cubic feet * 7.4805 gal/cu ft = 19,190.6 gal
12 ft round by 30 inches deep