7.9 gallons in a 33# forklift cylinder
A 5-pound propane cylinder contains approximately 1.2 gallons of propane. This is based on the fact that propane weighs about 4.24 pounds per gallon. Therefore, to convert the weight to gallons, you divide the weight of the propane by the weight per gallon.
A 20lb propane cylinder typically holds around 4.7 gallons of propane. Propane weighs about 4.2 pounds per gallon, so a 20lb cylinder can hold roughly 17-18 pounds of propane when full.
One gallon of propane weighs 5 pounds. The tank would hold 60 gallons.
A 10-pound propane tank can hold approximately 2.4 gallons of propane.
Propane has a density of about 4.24 pounds per gallon. Therefore, to convert 20 pounds of propane to gallons, you would divide 20 by 4.24, which equals approximately 4.72 gallons of propane.
90 cubic feet equates to 673.24675 US gallons of liquid propane.
100 gallons? Are you kidding me. Who asked this question. You need not be dealing with propane. Believe it or not, there are 1000 US Gallons in a 1000 "Gallon" propane tank. Some peoples kids.
Mine holds 127 gallons of propane when filled up to the 80% make, the fullest they can get.
It is approx 1,463,776 Imperial gallons.
A 60-pound propane tank typically holds about 14 gallons of liquid propane. This is based on the fact that propane weighs approximately 4.24 pounds per gallon. Therefore, when you divide the total weight of the propane in the tank by the weight per gallon, you arrive at roughly 14 gallons.
23.6 gallons
It's an oddly worded question because it's not really the forklift that's burning the propane but its engine. And this engine could be fitted to many applications. So let's consider how efficient a propane-fuelled engine is. Looking at some sources of information (by Googling) we find that propane engines can be about 35% efficient.