This is likely a local question and you don't say where you are located.
per ltr Rs.5 to Rs7, for eg: 1000 ltrs tank cost of Rs.5000 average.
First: Fill the 500 liter tank Second: Pour the water to the 300 liter tank, thus the 500 liter tank will now have 200 liters Third: Dispose of the water in the 300 liter tank Fourth: Pour the remaining content of the 500 liter tank(which is 200 liters) to the 300 liter tank Fifth: Fill the 500 liter tank(the 300 liter tank still has the 200 liters in it) Sixth: Pour the water from the 500 liter tank to the 300 liter tank(which already has 200 liters in it) Thus the remaining amount of water in the 500 liter tank is 400 liters
the temperature would be 50 degrees
1000 litres = 1 kilolitre so 150 litres = 150/1000 = 0.15 kilolitres.
The official SI unit for volume is the cubic meter, but for a fish tank, I would use liters. One liter is one cubic decimeter (or 1/1000 of a cubic meter).
A 1,000 cubic foot tank holds up to 7,480 US gallons of water.
1000 litres. This is because there are 1,000,000 cm3 in a m3. The reason for this is that there are 100cm in a metre. Cube this (as volume is in units cubed) and you get 100x100x100 is 1,000,000. A cm3 is equal to a millilitre and there are 1000ml in a litre. 1,000,000 (difference between cm3 and m3) / 1000 (ml in a litre) and you get 1000 (litres in a m3).
The amount of time that it takes to heat up a 300 liter water tank is dependent on the size of the water tank. However, to get an estimate multiply the liters by the size ofÊthe water tank.
There is no one tank, and no one capacity. A small car might have a 35 liter tank, a large car a 70 liter tank. A large truck may have a 370 liter tank.
850 cl 1 liter = 100 centiliters 1 centiliter = 0.01 liter
A cubic metre is 1000 litres. 100cm is 1m. you have 1mx1mx0.4m to give 0.4 cubic metres. This is then 400 litres.
a 300 liter or bigger tank