you fill the 3 gallon up then put it in the 5 gallon then fill the 3 gallon up again and poor as much as u can in the 5 gallon then u will be left with 1 gallon in the 3 gallon bucket
You can achieve this by first filling the 3-gallon container with oil, then pouring it into the 5-gallon container. Next, fill the 3-gallon container again and pour it into the 5-gallon container until it's full (leaving 1 gallon in the 3-gallon container).
Notation: ( x , y ) where x is the amount of water in the 3-gallon container and y is the amount of water in the 5-gallon container1. Fill the three-gallon container ( 3 , 0 )2. Pour the three gallons into the 5-gallon container ( 0 , 3 )3. Fill the three-gallon container ( 3 , 3 )4. Fill the five-gallon container with the three-gallon container, leaving 1 gallon in the three gallon container ( 1 , 5 )5. Pour out the water from the five-gallon container ( 1 , 0 )6. Pour the water from the three-gallon container into the five-gallon container ( 0 , 1 )7. Fill the three-gallon container ( 3 , 1 )8. Pour the water from the three-gallon container into the five-gallon container ( 0 , 4 )Another great answer here:[See below for the related link]
fill 5 gallon bucket and pour it into the 3 gallon bucket. dump the remaining 2 gallons into the large container pour the three gallons back into the five gallon container and top it off with two More gallons and dump the five now into the large container and it will measure 7 gallons 2+5= 7
Fill up the three gallon jug and pour it into the five gallon jug. Refill the three gallon jug and pour from it into the five gallon jug until it is full. What remains in the three gallon jug will be one gallon.
Well, honey, it's simple math. Fill up the 9 gallon container, pour it into the 4 gallon container until it's full, leaving you with 5 gallons in the 9 gallon container. Then empty out the 4 gallon container, pour the remaining 5 gallons from the 9 gallon container into the 4 gallon container, and finally fill up the 9 gallon container again. Voila, you've got yourself 6 gallons of water!
Flow is measured by volume per time. To make measurement you will need a stop watch and a container that has a volume measurement such as a gallon jug or five gallon bucket. Start filling container and start timer simultaneously, then after three minutes turn off faucet. Measure amount of water in container either by the volume on the conainer itself or use another container to measure in increments such as a quart jar or a 2-litre. Once you have determined your volume divide it by your time which would be three minutes. If you used gallons your result would be gallons per minute or gpm. If you used litres it would be litres per minute.
you can measure exactly 7 gallons using a five gallon jug and a three gallong jug by using one five gallon jug and 2/3 of the three gallon jug to equal seven gallons total. That is what I think for being 11 years old. by of course JACIE <3 !!!!!!!!!!!!!
It is three eights of a gallon.
fluid ounce cup pint quart gallon hogshead
This question can be answered in three ways. It takes 1851 gallons of water to refine a barrel of crude oil. One barrel of crude oil produces 19 gallons of gasoline and 10 gallons of diesel fuel, in this respect it takes 97 gallons of water to produce a gallon of gasoline. If you combine gasoline and diesel, it takes 63 gallons of water to produce a gallon of "fuel." A total of 42 gallons of petroleum products are produced from a barrel of crude oil, in this respect it takes 44 gallons of water to produce each gallon.
fill three liter can to the top empty contents into five liter can fill three liter can again empty into five liter can leaving one liter in the three liter can empty five liter can pour the remaining liter from three liter can into five liter can fill three liter can again and empty into five liter can leaving exactly 4 liters
20 gallon High 24" x 12" x 16" 20 gallon Long 30" x 12" x 12"