The pressure that a compressor produces is not the capacity of the compressor. Most small compressors will produce 100 psi pressure but how many cubic feet of air they can move in a given time varies greatly. For instance a small single phase hobby compressors will supply around 7 cfm (cubic feet per minute) at about 80 psi. Which is plenty for spraying but would struggle to supply most air tools. So that these small compressors can be more useful they usually have an air receiver to store the compressed air. This allows the unit to supply larger amounts of air for short periods of time thus overcoming some of the limitations of the small unit. For lower pressures (30-40 psi) a vane compressor is capable of supplying much higher volumes of air (cfm's) for its size.
You would need to supply the volume of the container, not the area. Your number of 14 square meters doesn't provide enough information. If you meant to write 14 CUBIC meters, then we can calculate the average density as 0.04286 grams per cubic centimeter,, which means that the object will easily float. If it is floating, then it displaces 600 kg of water, which has a volume (assuming fresh water at standard temperature) of 0.6 cubic meters.
Big enough to contain about 1,556 gallons of water.
Cubic yards.
Cubic centimeters does not convert to inches. In order to convert them, inches would have to be cubic inches. There are 16.387064 cubic centimeters in a cubic inch.
About 29.63, or 800/27. You have 800 cubes, each is one foot on a side. Every 27 of them is a cubic yard.
6' x 36" (3') =18 Square feet L x W = Area this equation does not supply enough paramaters for cubic feet L x W x H = Cubic Area
A shower should at minimum be about 45 cubic meters. This would provide enough floor space and height for the average person.
1 liter is equal to 1 cubic cm so 5000 cubic cm would equal 5000 liters. 1 litre = 1000 cubic centimetres (near enough) therefore 5000 cubic centimetres = 5 litres (near enough) The exact conversion is 1 litre = 1000.027 cubic centimetres. That is the volume of 1kg of pure water ar 4 deg.C and 760mm Hg pressure.
Cubic Transportation Systems
Strangely enough, 8.1 inch3 is exactly equal to 8.1 cubic inches.
A 4.1 cubic foot range is more than enough to cook a large turkey.
Anything cubed. Examples: cubic feet, cubic inches, cubic yards, cubic centimeters, cubic meters, cubic miles, cubic kilometers...
You would need to supply the volume of the container, not the area. Your number of 14 square meters doesn't provide enough information. If you meant to write 14 CUBIC meters, then we can calculate the average density as 0.04286 grams per cubic centimeter,, which means that the object will easily float. If it is floating, then it displaces 600 kg of water, which has a volume (assuming fresh water at standard temperature) of 0.6 cubic meters.
Its volume is 1 cubic centimeter or 1 cm3. Cubic centimer is a measurement of volume.One cubic centimeter of gold has a mass of about 19.32 g at room temperature.
Big enough to contain about 1,556 gallons of water.
There is not enough information to answer this question.
Your perception is inadequately trained. It's not the cubic foot's fault.