Depends on the size of the tank.
> Best work with cubic feet, first calculate the volume of the tank in cubic feet: = Length * width * height (all dimensions in feet) Then : For US gallons, multiply volume (cubic feet) by 7.4805 For UK gallons, multiply volume (cubic feet) by 6.2288
That's going to depend on the shape of the container, especially on how much 'real estate' the base of the container covers. For discussion, imagine that the container is a square fish tank, and the four walls go straight up from the four sides of the square base. -- If the base of the tank covers 64 square feet and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 1 foot deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 acre and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 0.0176 inch deep. -- If the base of the tank covers 1 square inch and it holds 64 cubic feet, then the water in it is 9,216 feet (1.745 mile) deep.
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet.
As an area of square feet has no height, it has no volume which is measured in cubic feet. Thus there are 0 cubic feet in 440 square feet.
Square feet and cubic feet are units of different measurements. Square feet is a unit of area. Cubic feet is a unit of volume.
453.6 cubic feet=138.29 square feet
Volume of a cylindrical tank 8 feet in diameter and 8 feet tall is pi x 16 square feet (radius squared) x 8 feet (height) = 402 cubic feet.
"Square cubic foot" or feet doesn't make sense. Either you have square feet, or cubic feet.
7 feet by 14 feet = 98 square feet 98 square feet by 4 feet = 392 cubic feet There are 9 square feet in a square yard, and there are 29 cubic feet in a cubic yard.... so 392 cubic feet = 14.519 cubic yards
... cubic square what? Meters? Yards? equals in cubic feet?
(Length of the tank, in feet) x (Width of the tank, in feet) x (Height of the tank, in feet).
10 ft X 10 ft square tank will hold 1000 cubic feet of water or 7480.51 gallons 10 ft round tank will hold 785 cubic feet of water or 5872.207 gallons