10,000 dollars
Assuming the jug is filled to the brim with quarters, each quarter has a value of $0.25. A gallon can hold approximately 3,300 quarters, so a 3-gallon jug would hold around 9,900 quarters. Therefore, the total value of the quarters in the 3-gallon jug would be approximately $2,475.
1000 quarters is $250
11 quarters = 2.75 dollars
A quarter is 808.5 mm3. If you melted the quarters into a slurry, and poured that into the barrel, you could fit 208 million/808.5 = 257,000 quarters into a 55 gallon drum. If you want to preserve them whole, this becomes a stacking problem. There will be spaces between the quarters, and we would have to estimate how much space is wasted. Just drawing packed circles on a piece of paper I'd guess perhaps 10% of the volume would be air, so deducting 25,000 quarters from our solid mass gives a ballpark estimate of 225,000 quarters.
20 qts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
10,000 dollars
About $4000 worth.
Assuming the jug is filled to the brim with quarters, each quarter has a value of $0.25. A gallon can hold approximately 3,300 quarters, so a 3-gallon jug would hold around 9,900 quarters. Therefore, the total value of the quarters in the 3-gallon jug would be approximately $2,475.
about $95.000
Enough to afford a bank
figure a 20 gallon fuel tank at todays prices.
15 quarters, as in 15/4? That would be 3.75 gallons.
It depends on how many gallons the fuel tank holds and how much you are paying for a gallon of gasoline.
4 quarters
1000 quarters is $250
11 quarters = 2.75 dollars