3 Imperial gallons = 13.6 litres (approx) = 6.8 2-litre bottles.
5.5 bottles
24
You could fill the 7-liter bucket and pour water into the aquarium until it is full, but that would make too much sense. If you really need to have three liters, fill the 7-liter bucket (which, although unmarked, will be larger than the 4-liter bucket) and pour it into the 4-liter bucket. When the 4-liter bucket is full, there will be three liters remaining in the 7-liter bucket.
you fill the 3 gallon bucket into the 5 gallon bucket twice 2 *3 6 gallons but the 5 gallon will only overflow once it hits 5 gallons. You get the 1 gallon half in the 3 gallon bucket and dump the water out of the 5 gallon bucket. You pour the 1 gallon left from the 3 gallon bucket into the 5 gallon bucket and then refill the 3 gallon bucket and put the 3 gallons in making 4 gallons.
A gallon is bigger
First, fill up the 5 gallon bucket. Then, pour the contents in the 5 gallon bucket into the 3 gallon bucket. This leaves 2 gallons left in the 5 gallon bucket. Pour the 2 gallons into the 3rd container. Now, fill the 5 gallon bucket again and pour the full 5 gallons into the 3rd container. This gives you 7 gallons.
Dont know
I had a five gallon Alhambra bottle full of silver coins only, it equaled $4,698.50
you fill a 10 liter bucket full, you lower the horseshoe in and u mesuare the amount of water that got out of the bucket
Water weighs 8.34 lbs per gallon, so 5 would weigh 41.7 lbs.
There are two easy ways to do these with these resources: The first one is to simply fill the two litre bucket half full and fill the four litre bucket to the brim and then, all together, in both buckets you have five litres: Voila The second one is slightly more complex you fill the four litre bucket three quatre full and then fill the other bucket to the brim: Voila As well as these there are many more more complex answers to this questions
foolish!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 at its brim we'll come to knw when d bucket is full stupid!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Yes you are). Actually the correct answer is one inch below the brim. This was calculated by weight over several five gallon buckets.
240 ml is about a quarter liter or about one cup full (or about 1/16 of a gallon)
5 gallons of liquid does indeed occupy a volume of 0.67 cubic feet (5 gallons divided by 7.48 gallons per cubic foot), but a "5-gallon" bucket actually holds a bit more than 5 gallons. Take your bucket and a 1-gallon jug, fill the bucket with water a gallon at a time, and mark the side of the bucket at each 1 gallon interval. You will discover that the 5 gallon mark ends up about 1.75 inches from the top of the bucket. Therefore a full bucket really holds somewhere in the neighborhood of 5.75 gallons (+/- a few ounces, depending on bucket manufacturer). This "extra" space in the bucket is there for practical reasons, as well as for safety--imagine the mess potential in opening a bucket of paint that is full to the very tip-top. So if you are filling your bucket to the top, you are really dealing with a volume of about 0.77 cubic feet.