Open main valve for 1 minute while capturing water (think bucket), then measure water.
direction of flow
A standard fire hose is 50 feet long. A hose this length with a 2-inch radius grants about 4.36 cubic feet. This volume holds 32 gallons of water.
to treat what? to form chloramines or th ebreakpoint the ammonia? Two possibilities with two different answers.
It kills most of all the germs and bacteria/pathegons in it. Some germs can tolerate extreme heat, but the vast majority die. However, boiling does not get rid of lead, dirt, calcium chloride, calcium floride, copper, ect. However, boiling water temporarily decreases the hardness of the water; therefore, afterwords it can be more hard. If you are looking to boil water, you should have a pre-filter and you should also have a second purification method, because boiling isn't the most effective measure of purification.
I was looking for something to back up my theory that 2 containers are joined by a tube. One of the containers was full of water and higher than the other one, so that the water from the higher one flowed into the bottom one through the tube. The tube was probably sized according to the time it took for a specific amount of water to pass through it into the other container. After that had been done they put marks on the bottom one so that they could say for example that the water was up to here, therefore it was 12 o'clock. At least that's what I heard.
The answer is unknown. In order to answer this question you need to know the pressure of the water.
50 gallons of water per minute equals 3,000 gallons per hour.
About 1.25 gallons per minute.
About 500,000 gallons of water
You would measure the water in a bath tub in gallons.
Gallons per minute is the amount of gallons used or moved or saved for every minute of time that passes. If you wanted to calculate how many gallons were pumped through a water fountain every minute, you would measure this and divide the gallons by the minutes and get your "gallons per minute".
4 gallons if head delivers 2 gallons/minute
50 gallons per minute
150,000 gallons
Obviously it partly depends on the shower head, but most will give about 2.5 gallons per minute, so you are using about 12 gallons of water, possibly about 8 - 9 of it hot.Place a 1 liter bottle below the shower and measure how many seconds it will require to fill it. Then:Number of gallons in five minutes = 78,1/ Number of secondsAn average shower head emits about 1.3 -1.5 gallons per minute, so that would be 7 -8 gallons.
odoas
5 imperial gallons per minute