No, a foot tub is called a foot tub because you use it to wash your feet. Though alternatively you can also use it to massage your feet with more advanced products. The depth of the tub has no relevance to it really, so long as it's deep enough to wash feet with.
Technically, none. A square foot is a measure of area whereas it is the volume of water that is required. To convert from area to volume it is necessary to know the depth. A twelfth of a cubic foot will cover an area of one square foot to a depth of 1 inch. A cubic foot will cover it to a depth of 1 foot, 100 cubic feet will cover it to a depth of 100 feet.
1 foot
30536.28 gallons By figuring your pool's depth, you can then determine how much water your pool holds. This is how you would find the average depth: shallow end depth + deep end depth divided by 2. Rectangular pool: Lenght x Width x average depth x 7.5 total gallons. Oval pool: full width x full length x average depths x 5.9 total gallons. Sloping sides: If your pool has sloping sides, multiply the final figure by .85. Hope this helps. === === An 18 foot round by 42``tall pool holds 7300 to 7500 gal.
None. A lineal foot has length but no width (or depth or height).
I believe that it is because it has a slight resemblence of a slimy foot
Because they are on each foot PS foot and toes are have alot in common
That's called a foot ... because it's about the length of a man's foot.
If the surface is 9-ft by 16-ft, and the sides are straight all the way down,then the amount of water in it is 1,077.2 gallons for every 1 foot of depth.
Because of the weight of the water, the water pressure increases at a rate of 2.31 psi per foot of depth.
Cubic is 3 dimensional (height, width, depth) whereas square is two dimensional (height, depth).
To find the volume you would first find the area of the triangle (in square feet.) The area of a triangle is 1/2 x base x height. If the triangle is equillateral (all sides the same length) and the sides are eight feet long, then the equation is (1/2) x (8ft) x (8ft) = 32 square feet. Then you take this area and multiply it by the depth. The depth is (3.5/12) because it is in inches rather than feet. So, your answer is 9 1/3 cubic feet.
about 2 psi. (0.5 psi / foot of depth)