25.7 dry quarts per cubic foot.
55 US quarts is equal to about 1.83811 cubic feet. There are almost exactly 30 US quarts in 1 cubic foot.
1 cubic foot = approx 28,316.8 cubic centimeters (rounded)
12 inches in a foot 12(12)(12)=1728 1728 cubic inches
You may have mis typed your question. 1540 hundred cubic feet = 1540 cubic feet of course 154000 cu ft = 57.0 cu yards = 4361 Mega liters
125 cubic inches of space is approximately equivalent to each of the following rounded quantities of space. We have no way of knowing how much water may be in that space. For all we know, it may be empty, or have some other type of stuff in it. -- 0.0723 cubic foot -- 0.5411 gallon -- 2.164 quarts -- 4.329 pints -- 8.658 cups -- 69.264 fluid ounces
5 quarts service fill 9 quarts dry fill
About 25 cubic feet, or almost one cubic yard. Road salt weighs 80 pounds per cubic foot
The precise number will depend on the type of bindings and how tightly packed the books are. Roughly, however, one cubic foot of average books (a mixture of hard-bound and paperback), neatly (though imperfectly) packed, weighs 22 lbs.
A square foot is a measure of area, a cubic foot is a measure of volume. The two measure diffrent things and are not compatible. You may not convert one to the other.
20 quarts would be dry fill, it may not take all of it to fill.
To determine how many 5p (5 pence coins) fit in a cubic foot, we first need to know the dimensions of a 5p coin. A 5p coin has a diameter of about 18.0 mm and a thickness of about 1.7 mm. A cubic foot is equivalent to 28,316.8 cubic centimeters. Assuming an approximate packing density, around 10,000 to 12,000 5p coins can fit in a cubic foot, but the exact number may vary based on the arrangement and packing efficiency.
1 cubic foot = 1,728 cubic inches1 gallon = 231 cubic inches42 gallons = (42 x 231) cubic inches = (42 x 231 / 1,728) = 5.6146 cubic feet (rounded)