About six pounds.
You don't, drums are 44 gallons.
12 inches
It reffers to a body part know as the rectume. It also mean a man how owns a ship and works in the army. That's is why they are called rectume rangers. it means imperial gallon it is used in Canada as an example it is a little larger than the us gallon
It will vary. An older diesel freighter (container ship) will usually do about 1 nautical mile per 3 gallons of diesel. modern ships work out to as low as 1 gallon.
10726 gallons
At the speed of a normal cruise ship, QE2 can move 125 feet per gallon. At her high speed service speed (28.5 knots) she can move 50 feet per gallon.
IFO 380 is a type of intermediate fuel oil, AKA bunker fuel. It is what a ship would use. Ship operators buy it by the metric ton rather than by the gallon. However, it is a good question because it puts the value in terms that a regular person can understand, that is, if a cruise ship pulled up to a giant pump, what would they pay per gallon? Commodity price of IFO 380 as of 10 April 2012 was $735.00 per metric ton (yes, the price of that has gone up, too) A metric ton is 1000 Kilos. The density of IFO 380 is 0.991 grams per cc according to wikipedia. So 1000 Kg / 0.991 = 1009 liters. There are 3.785 liters to a gallon. so, 1009 / 3.785 = 266.58 gallons. Now, all we have to do is divide $735 by 266.58 and we get $2.73 per gallon. Hmm, I would have thought that they get a better deal than that.
The Queen Elizabeth was in a fire, and she was scrapped in Hong Kong in 1975. The Queen Elizabeth 2 (called QE2) is currently docked in Dubai - with a very uncertain future. The ship is sailable - but highly expensive to operate - as getting the ship to travel 1 yard in the water - takes 1 gallon of diesel fuel!!! Other ships - twice as large in capaticy - can travel about 1800 feet on a gallon of fuel!!!!!!
The fuel sending units are in the fuel tank.
1 gallon = 1 gallon
A UK gallon also known as an imperial gallon is larger. An imperial gallon is 4.5L and a US gallon is 4L