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On average it takes about 1,600 BTUs to heat 50 square feet. Multiplying 50 by 1600 equals about 80,000. Therefore, the heating plan of 1,600 square foot are would take about 80,000 BTUs.
There are about 1030 BTUs in a cubic foot of natural gas. If one wishes to know the gas consumption (in feet3 per hour) for a given BTU per hour usage rate, one would divide the amount of BTUs by 1030. That would yield the number of cubic feet of gas that is used per hour. Q: I'm heating a space using 10,300 BTUs per hour and I'm using my natural gas heater to do it. How many cubic feet of gas am I using per hour? A: 10,300 BTUs (the heat generated per hour) divided by 1030 (the number of BTUs per cubic foot of gas) equals 10 cubic feet. You're using 10 cubic feet per hour. You apply 10,300 BTUs to heat the space per hour, and you use 10 cubic feet of gas per hour to do that. (And yes, I picked easy numbers.)
The area of an object in three dimensions will be measured in cubic feet. 1600 cubic feet.
You cannot "fill" a cubic measurement with a square measurement.I think you meant cubic yards.1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet.Your concrete slab is 1600 x 4/12 cubic feet = 533.333333... cubic feet.533.333333... cubic feet / 27 = 19.753 cubic yards (rounded to third decimal).
4800 BTUs will 150 square feet.
No. BTUs are heat (British Thermal Units) and cfm is a measure of air flow volume (cubic feet per minute)
InstructionsFind BTU Value and Convert1 Find the BTU value of the gas. This is determined periodically during the refining process by the manufacturer. Natural gas is 70 to 90% methane and up to 20% ethane, with smaller quantities of other gases such as propane and butane. Variations in the composition determine the BTU value.2 Convert cubic feet to cubic meters. If your supplier gave you the BTU value of the gas per cubic foot, convert the value to cubic meters as follows:1 cubic meter = 35.3146667 cubic feet. Multiply this by the BTU value of your gas. If your gas has a value of 1,000 BTU/cubic foot, then one cubic meter will contain 35,314.6667 BTUs.Sponsored LinksGas Flow Calibration Download a Free Best Practice Guide On Effective Gas Flow Calibration.3 Calculate the total BTUs in the total number of cubic meters. Multiply the number of cubic meters of gas by the BTUs per cubic meter (from Step 2). For instance, if you have 1,000 cubic meters:35,314.6667 BTU / cubic meter x 1,000 cubic meters = 35,314,666.7 BTUs.4 Convert BTUs to MMBTUs. Since there are 1,000,000 BTUs in an MMBTU, divide the total BTUs by 1,000,000:35,314,666.7 BTUs / 1,000,000 = 35.314.6667 MMBTUsNote that your significant figures will depend on how many significant figures are given by the refiner for the BTU value of the gas.
1600 cfm
40 inches X 40 inches = 1600 sq. inches 1600 sq. inches / 144 sq inches/sq. ft. = 11 sq. feet. You asked for cubic feet, yet you only gave 2 dimensions; so my answer is in square feet. If you want the volume, then you will have to supply the 3rd dimension.
A 4ft x 8ft sheet is not a volume, it is an area, 32 square feet
You will need a portable air conditioner that offers 24,000 - 25,500 BTUs to cool a room of about 1500 cubic feet. This is a large sized room and a 2.5 ton unit would cool that area.
616 x 7.48 =4607.68