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Mass = (Density)/(Volume) Make sure you convert your density to gallons.
The answer depends on 14.5 gallons of what, and where. I would guess that in mid ocean, 14.5 gallons of seawater would be worth very little.
GALLONS As in: 1 gallon, 2 gallons.
First you need to define what you mean by gallon; an Imperial gallon is 4.546 litres, a US gallon is 3.785 litres, and a US dry gallon is 4.405 litres. At 20oC water weighs 0.9982kg/l, so an Imperial gallon being 4.546 litres weighs 4.546 X 0.9982 = 4.538kg.
There are two half gallons in a gallon.
Fill the 5 gallon jug Pour from the 5 gallon to fill the 3 gallon jug You now have 2 gallons in the 5 gallon jug Empty the 3 gallon jug Pour the 2 gallons from the 5 gallon jug into the 3 gallon jug Fill the 5 gallon jug Pour from the 5 gallon jug to fill the three gallon jug -- this will tale 1 gallon You now have 4 gallons in the 5 gallon jug
fill the 7 gallon bucket, dump it into the 5 gallon bucket and save the remaining 2 gallons, repeat and you have 4 gallons.
Two half-gallons = 1 gallon
The conversion from UK to US gallons is: UK gallons x 1.201 = US gallons
Multiply Imperial gallons by 1.2 to get US gallons.
Since there are 4 quarts to the gallon - The answer is 4 gallons !
This is a ratio: whatever : treat 1 gallon : 1000 gallon ? gallon : 25 gallon First find out how much treats 1 gallon (divide both sides by 1000): 1 ÷ 1000 gallon : 1000 ÷ 1000 gallon → 0.001 gallon : 1 gallon Now find out how much treats 25 gallons (multiply both sides by 25) 25 × 0.001 gallon : 25 × 1 gallon → 0.025 gallon : 25 gallon → you need 0.025 gallons.