1.244 cubic feet or 2,150 cubic inches
A bushel.
. . . is that a bushel of feathers, a bushel of cotton, a bushel of wheat, or a bushel of lead pellets? (A bushel is a volume, not a weight.)
Bushel
"Bushel" is a noun, the name of a unit of measurement of volume.
Volume.
None. A bushel is a measure of volume e.g. a bushel of potatoes.
Answer A US bushel is a measure of dry volume and equals approximately 31 litres, or 8 dry gallons. An Imperial bushel equals approximately 36 litres, or 8 Imperial gallons. A peck is also a measure of dry volume and equals 8 dry quarts in both the US and Imperial systems. There are 4 pecks in a bushel.
A bushel is a measure of weight (53 pounds) a quart is a measure of volume. The two units can not be directly equated.
yes...weigh pail contents on scale and use weight per bushel of volume chart
The simple answer is that it has a volume of a bushel. A bushel is about 35 liters or about one and a quarter cubic feet. The imperial bushel is about 3% larger. As for the actual dimensions of a bushel basket, I would have to get back to you on that, but I would guess about 18" diameter and a foot tall.
Dozen is a count and bushel is a volume. The two measurements cannot be reconciled without a conversion factor. There are fewer than one dozen bowling balls in a bushel but, a lot more than a dozen golf balls in a bushel.
It weighs about 14.89 kilograms or 32.57 pounds.