2,560 cubic feet is about 72,491.13 liters.
To heat a 10 cubic meter room, you generally need about 50-100 BTUs per cubic meter, depending on factors like insulation and desired temperature increase. Therefore, you would require approximately 500 to 1,000 BTUs to adequately heat the room. For precise heating needs, consider local climate conditions and the specific heat loss characteristics of the space.
4800 BTUs will 150 square feet.
There are about 1030 BTUs in a cubic foot of natural gas. If one wishes to know the gas consumption (in feet3 per hour) for a given BTU per hour usage rate, one would divide the amount of BTUs by 1030. That would yield the number of cubic feet of gas that is used per hour. Q: I'm heating a space using 10,300 BTUs per hour and I'm using my natural gas heater to do it. How many cubic feet of gas am I using per hour? A: 10,300 BTUs (the heat generated per hour) divided by 1030 (the number of BTUs per cubic foot of gas) equals 10 cubic feet. You're using 10 cubic feet per hour. You apply 10,300 BTUs to heat the space per hour, and you use 10 cubic feet of gas per hour to do that. (And yes, I picked easy numbers.)
how many square feet will 26,000.00 heat
about 12,000
Btu and cubic meter are two different measuring units. Btu is the unit for heat transmission, like in ac units 12000 btu/hr. It means this ac unit would remove 12000 btu of heat from the room in one hour. where as cubic meter is the unit for volume.
The answer depends on the city. Somewhere like Colombo (Sri Lanka) will probably require 0 btus.
A one ton heat pump typically has around 12,000 British Thermal Units (BTUs) per hour of heating or cooling capacity.
1 standard cubic foot of natural gas gives about 1030 BTU
btus needed to heat & cool 625sf room
It takes about 50,000 btus to heat 1000 square feet