Answer
There are 64 extra large eggs in a gallon and a little under 79 large eggs in a gallon so multiply those numbers by five and you will have your answer
300
Fill the 3 gal pail and pour into the 5 gal pail. Refill the 3 gal pail and pour two gallons of it into the 5 gallon pail - filling the 5 gallon pail and leaving 1 gallon in the 3 gallon pail. Dump out the 5 gallon pail and pour the remaining 1 gallon from the 3 gallon pail into the 5 gallon pail. Fill the 3 gallon pail one more time and pour that into the 5 gallon pail with the 1 gallon already in it and you have 4 gallons.
14.5" height
5 gallon
You first dump the 5-gallon pail, then fill the 5-gallon pail from the water from the 8-gallon pail. Then you dump the 5-gallon pail again, and you are left with 2 gallons in the 8-gallon pail.
42.6 lbs.
44pds
yes...weigh pail contents on scale and use weight per bushel of volume chart
Need to know the dimensions of the pail in order to answer this. Six inches in a pail with a wide radius and shallow walls will not be the same as six inches in a pail with a smaller radius and taller walls. 5 gallons is only a measurement of the volume capacity.
40 lbs http://www.onlineconversion.com/weight_common.htm
Unknown. Mercury is too dangerous to test.
It helps to know that 16 ounces equals one pint. Two pints per quart, four quarts per gallon makes 8 pints per gallon. So 5 gallons equals 8*5 = 40 pints. That's the answer.
Fill 5 qt pail. Then from full 5 qt fill 3 qt pail. You now have 2 qt left in 5 qt pail. Now empty 3 qt pail then put the 2qt from 5qt pail into this 3 qt pail. Now refill 5 qt pail Use this top off 3 qt till full this leaves you with 4 qts in 5 qt pail