2500 btu per cubic foot of vapor.
One Cubic Meter of natural gas is approximately 36000 btu.
BTU`s are measured in cubic feet
Between (.07) and (.24) BTU per cubic foot. For Central Air, might be better to use (.07 BTU per Cu.Ft.) For window AC unit cooling 150 square feet, use (.024 BTU per Cu.Ft.) For window AC unit cooling 1600 square feet, use (.07 BTU per Cu.Ft.) [[[ All scenarios assume 8 foot ceilings ]]]
1 cubic foot of natural gas can be burned to generate about 1000 btu of heat. A 105000 btu/hr appliance would therefore require about 105 cubic feet of natural gas per hour; this is 0.1 thousand cubic feet, or 0.1mcf/hr.
You can't.....BTU/Hr is a unit of heat input i.e. Energy. Cu. ft./hr is a measure of volume flow rate. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> If you are talking about Natural Gas divide btu input or output by 1000 for cubic feet of fuel used, propane divide by 2500 btu for cubic feet of vapor used.
Specifically 1013.2 btu per standard cubic foot, for pure methane.
BTU per hour is a measure of power. Cubic meters is a measure of volume. Perhaps you mean cubic meters of propane, alcohol or some other fuel.
There is one cubic feet per cubic foot.
27 cubic feet per cubic yard.
Cubic feet per second x 0.0238 = cubic meters per second.
10.177 cubic meters per second = 359.4 cubic feet per second