There are eight gallons to the bushel by a strictly volume measurement, but remember that in US commodity marketing, a bushel is dictated by the various qualities of the grain or oilseed in question. So a commercially-marketed bushel may contain slightly more or less than eight gallons, depending on the moisture content, test weight, and amount of foreign matter contained in the grain.
8 gallons
1.244 cubic feet in a bushel... doesn't matter what its a bushel of.
8 gallons in a bushel
60.
One bushel of soybeans contains about 1.244 cubic feet.
1 US bushel = 9.30917797 US gallons
One bushel of corn yields about 2.8 gallons of ethanol.
Wheat and soybeans: 1 bushel = 60 lb = 27.2155422 kg
At approximately 3,000 per pound, 1 bushel (60 lb) would be 180,000 soybeans. At approximately 2,500 per pound (a planting size), there would be 150,000 soybeans per bushel. Soybeans can range in weight from about 2,500/lb to about 3,500/lb.
4 pecks. 1 bushel = 8 gallons, 1 peck = 2 gallons.
Wheat and soybeans: 1 bushel = 60 lb = 27.2155422 kg
It depends on what you're measuring. For example, a bushel of corn weighs around 56 pounds, while a bushel of soybeans weighs around 60 pounds.
Well, seeing as WikiAnswers states the following: "Jobs and Education question: How many peck in a bushel? Four pecks in a bushel, and two gallons in a peck, so eight gallons in a bushel". Then the answer would be: a peck of peaches is smaller than a bushel of apples.