Two cubic feet.
About 45 gallons.
approx. 8 gal. of gas = 1000 cubic feet of natural gas. water can't be compared to natural gas in cubic feet
There are no feet in any cubic feet. "Feet" is a unit of length or distance, "cubic feet" is a unit of volume. If length units and volume units could be converted to each other, you'd be able to figure out how many gallons tall you are, or how many yards of gas you put in your car yesterday.
The volume of gas would be 598.7 cubic feet.
0.4 pounds per cubic feet - a very massive gas!
It is Measured in Volume as Cubic Feet
1 cubic foot of liquid oxygen is about 860 cubic feet of gaseous oxygen.
What exactly do you want to measure about the gas? If you want to measure the volume, you would use cubic millimiters - or cubic anything. Volume is usually expressed as some linear measured that is cubed: cubic meters, cubic centimeters, or (to use a non-standard unit) cubic feet. Some measurements, though, already imply volume, such as liters (which is equal to a cubic decimeter), or gallons.What exactly do you want to measure about the gas? If you want to measure the volume, you would use cubic millimiters - or cubic anything. Volume is usually expressed as some linear measured that is cubed: cubic meters, cubic centimeters, or (to use a non-standard unit) cubic feet. Some measurements, though, already imply volume, such as liters (which is equal to a cubic decimeter), or gallons.What exactly do you want to measure about the gas? If you want to measure the volume, you would use cubic millimiters - or cubic anything. Volume is usually expressed as some linear measured that is cubed: cubic meters, cubic centimeters, or (to use a non-standard unit) cubic feet. Some measurements, though, already imply volume, such as liters (which is equal to a cubic decimeter), or gallons.What exactly do you want to measure about the gas? If you want to measure the volume, you would use cubic millimiters - or cubic anything. Volume is usually expressed as some linear measured that is cubed: cubic meters, cubic centimeters, or (to use a non-standard unit) cubic feet. Some measurements, though, already imply volume, such as liters (which is equal to a cubic decimeter), or gallons.
1 cubic foot = 7.48 US gallons
261,818.18 Gallons or 218,009.24 Gallons Imperial for all you metric folks.
The molar volume of an ideal gas at 25 0C and 100 kPa is 0,875 436 4 cubic feet.
420 (feet^3) = 3 141.81818 US gallons