1 cubic meter is 1000 Liters
100 cm = 1 meter, 1m x 1m x 1m = 1 cubic meter
100cm x 100cm x 100cm=1,000,000cubic cm = 1 cubic meter
1 cubic cm = 1 ml, 1000ml = 1 Liter
(1,000,000 cubic cm) x (ml/cubic cm) x (Liter/1000 ml) = 1000 Liters.
1 cubic meter of volume corresponds to 264.172gallons (rounded),
regardless of what it's full of, or even if it's empty.
Fuel oil… water… air… liquid gold… it is all the same!
There are 1,000 litres in a cubic metre of anything.
With a density of 0,9kg per liter 1.100 liters.
At a density of 930 kg per cubic metre, one metric tonne would take up a volume of 1.075 cubic metres.
1 cubic meter = 1,000 liters
Regardless of what's in it.
Even if it's empty.
264.17 US gallons.
One cubic meter of fuel is 1000L
Heavy water
Because as with any liquid, gas or products that expand with heat. Gas,(by this I assume you mean fuel)expands at moderately low temps. (85-78) You will have more fuel in the tank on a hot day (85-90) than the next morning at say 72 degrees. Gas Volume correction is a means in which to determine several things. 1. It insures that if a station pays for 5000 gallons, the tank gage will validate the delivery + - what the temp of the fuel is before delivery and after delivery. It will show that on a relatively warm day delivery, the actual volume delivered was 4987 gallons. On a cold day delivery the volume will read 5012 gallons. 2. if a cold day delivery was scheduled, and the current reading of the tank at delivery was 4027 gallons of fuel in a 10000 gallon capacity tank, the driver will know that transferring a scheduled 5000 gallon load risks the eventuality that with a rise in the temperature, the tanks will overflow. And finally 3. The pump meters the amount of fuel dispensed according to the ambient temps. It correlates the temp of the fuel and ambient temp to insure that if you, the consumer, paid for 10 gallons of fuel, that you get 10 gallons of fuel with a margin of 9/10th give or take.
It depends on how significant the temperature variation is. Jet fuel has a coefficient of thermal expansion of 0.00099/C. That means that for every 10 degree Celsius rise in temperature the volume will increase by almost 1%.
One of the properties of a gas is that is expands to fill the container it is in, so yes, it can change volume. Its volume will only be constant when it is in a closed container.
You can measure the volume of elements like gold in their solid state using displacement. You can do this by putting water in a measuring cup and then putting the gold in the water. Record the level of the water before and subtract it from the level of the water after and you will get the volume. In its liquid form, you can just use a measuring cup.
To convert cubic meters to metric tonnes of fuel oil, divide the volume in cubic meters by the density of the fuel oil in tonnes/m³ (or in kg/l). The density will depends upon the temperature of the fuel oil.
BTU per hour is a measure of power. Cubic meters is a measure of volume. Perhaps you mean cubic meters of propane, alcohol or some other fuel.
Of diesel fuel?
That would be cubic centimeter, in volume, of fuel.
Cubic centimeters is a measure of volume not horsepower.it will depend on compression ratio , type of fuel, and other factors.
9,000
In a technical sense, any fuel used by ships is bunker fuel. As regards heavy fuel oil, it's either No. 5 or No. 6 fuel oil, and is most commonly No. 6 or "bunker fuel" or "navy special fuel oil" or something similar.No. 6 heavy fuel oil has a specific gravity of about 0.94 to 0.95 at room temperature (68 degrees F), and that translates to a weight density of about 59.3 to 59.9 pounds per cubic foot. Water weighs 62.44 pounds per cubic foot, by comparison at 68 degrees F.
the term 'cc' means cubic centimetre which gives the stroke volume of an engine. basically it is the volume of cylinder in which fuel burns to give movement to piston.
Using metric measurements you would most commonly purchase car fuel or milk in "Litres" (or "Liters" American spelling).However, the base unit of volume is the cubic metre:-Where there are:-1000 cubic metres in a cubic kilometer1000 litres in a cubic metre.100 centileters in a litre.1000 millilitres in a litre.10 mililitres in a centilitreand:-- milliliter = ml-- cubic centimeter =cc-- liter =l
Heavy Fuel was created in 1991.
Keep track of the fuel consumption, every liter of fuel burned creates about 2 kg of carbon dioxide which occupies about 1 cubic meter
C.C stands for Cubic Capacity. The term can be applied to any object that can contain a volume of something. Cubic Capacity is measured in cm3 (Cubic Centimetres) or C.I (Cubic Inches). One Cubic Centimetre is equal to one centilitre. When talking about engines, C.C is the total volume capacity of all the engines' cylinders put together. The measurement is taken when each piston is in the down position. CC is not an indication of how much fuel the engine draws in per stroke (cycle); this is dependant on valve timing and clearances, nominal fuel line-pressure and various carburation / injection settings.