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.
None. A bushel is a measure of volume e.g. a bushel of potatoes.
It weighs about 14.89 kilograms or 32.57 pounds.
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.
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.
yes...weigh pail contents on scale and use weight per bushel of volume chart
A bushel is a measure of weight (53 pounds) a quart is a measure of volume. The two units can not be directly equated.
A bushel is a unit of volume equivalent to 4 pecks or 32 quarts. Therefore, a bushel of green boiled peanuts would be equal to 32 quarts.
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.