1 gallon weighs 10lb, so 9 gallons weighs 90 lb or 41kg.
Edit: This answer ignores the empty weight of the cask itself. The cask weighs 20-30lbs depending on manufacturer, so the weight of a full cask is around 110-130lbs
1 Imperial beer barrel = 29.9762583 Imperial gallons
Liquid, usually beer or ale - 9 imperial gallons = a firkin
the weight of one us gallon of water is approximately 8.35lb beer is a liquid so that's as close as you can get just multiply the weight of the liquid times the amount of gallons and you should get your answer i tried is all i can say :3
A keg is technically any type of steel container used to serve beer from using either pressurized air for carbon dioxide. What most people think of a keg is actually a 1/2 barrel. A barrel is equal to 31 gallons (US). What most people call a keg is actually a 1/2 barrel, so 15.5 gallons. Oddly enough, what most people call a 1/4 keg is actually a 1/4 barrel, not a 1/4 of what people think of when they think of a keg (which is a 1/2 barrel). So a 1/4 keg (aka 1/4 barrel) is 7.75 gallons. There's 128oz of beer in a gallon. Assuming you want a cup of beer to be 12oz, which is what is in a bottle or can of beer, there will be 82.67 cups of beer in a 1/4 keg (aka 1/4 barrel).
That is 2.375 gallons
9 imperial gallons
There are 31 gallons in a barrel of beer per the result of tax law definitions.
88.76 gallons.
around 165 in a keg that is almost 16 gallons
6,159 gallons
46.34 if 12 oz cans.
assuming a case is 24 12 oz beers that 288 fluid oz which is 2.25 Gallons
1 US beer barrel = 31 US gallons 1 UK beer barrel = 36 imperial gallons 1 US barrell = 31.5 US gallons (used for wine) there are many different sizes for barrells would need to know what type of barrel you are comparing
60,000 barrels of oil = 2,520,000 gallons.
1 Imperial beer barrel = 29.9762583 Imperial gallons
What kind of gallon? Sheesh. US Gallons? 11095226.199 UK Gallons? 9238708.42856 Wine Gallons? 11095226.199 (same vol as US Gallons) Beer Gallon? 9088642.7375 Or how about 'pottles'? 18477416.8571
It's called a firkin, and it holds nine imperial gallons, a little bit less in US gallons.