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Yes. Obviously buckets come in different sizes, but 10 liters is a good approximation or average.
by my hands
You need at least one more bucket
3x3x3=27
1975
Daniel uses 6 buckets with 4 liters of water to fill the tank
Start 10 - 0 - 0 7 - 0 - 3 7 - 3 - 0 4 - 3 - 3 4 - 5 - 1 9 - 0 - 1 9 - 1 - 0 5 - 5 - 0
~12 liters per day from when they start blooming till they shed their leaves. give it to them every three days (40 liters twice a week should be fine) preferably by covered drip irrigation on a timer
They sell fuel measured in liters in Austraulia and in 1955 it was 8¢ per liter, diesel 6¢
In Australia, there are several different sizes. The most popular being 600mL, 1L, 2L and 3L.
This method works with any such problem, as long as the two buckets' liter-capacities (or gallon capacities, etc.) have no common factors, or else the common factors are also factors of the amount you're trying to measure. Fill the 7-liter bucket, and empty 5 liters of it into the 5-liter bucket; then dump out the 5 liters. Two liters will remain in the 7-liter bucket; transfer them to the 5-liter bucket. Fill the 7-liter bucket again, and empty enough of the bucket into the 5-liter bucket to fill it. That should only be 3 liters transfered, leaving 4 liters left in the 7-liter bucket. QED.
The most popular size can for commercial distribution of food and supplies to kitchens (not including 5 gallon buckets), the number ten can contains 3.98 liters or 103 1/2 ounces or 13 cups. It is roughly the size of a 3 pound coffee can.