(9.6 tons per hour) is incorrect. Here's why.
F= New Fuel Consumption
S= New Speed
Fo= Lot Fuel Consumption
So= Old Speed
Formula;
F=(S3 x Fo)/So3
Equation;
F=(183 x 8)/153
F= 46656/3375
F= 13.8 tons
1 knots = 1.15077945 miles/hour40 knots = 46.031178 miles/hour
340 knots = 391.265 mph
20 knots is about 23.02 miles per hour (knots x 1.150779448 = mph).
250 knots = 287.694862 miles per hour 250 knots = 463 kilometers per hour
If you want the answer in miles per hour, 20 knots is 23.015589 miles per hour
Fuel consumption generally increases with speed due to greater hydrodynamic resistance. While the exact relationship can vary based on the vessel's design, a common rule of thumb is that fuel consumption increases by the cube of the speed ratio. Therefore, if the vessel burns 8 tons per hour at 15 knots, it could burn approximately 10 tons per hour at 18 knots, depending on specific factors. For precise calculations, a vessel's fuel consumption curve would be needed.
The Airbus A320 burns roughly 2500 pounds per hour, which is about 368 gallons per hour.
it burns 10 minutes per hour although that's what I think it is correct me please
The fuel burn rate for a Gulfstream GIIb varies depending on factors such as altitude, weight, speed, and weather conditions. On average, this aircraft burns around 400-450 gallons per hour during cruise flight.
Airliner jet engines such as a Boeing 737 burns about 3,500 pounds of fuel per hour at cruising altitude and speed. Thats a little over 500 gallons per hour per engine.
Fuel Consumption, gallons per hour: 233
The McDonnell Douglas MD-9 typically burns around 3,000 to 4,000 pounds of fuel per hour of flight, depending on factors such as altitude, weight, and speed.
Based upon ferry range, the A340-300 (the most common version) burn 9.6 liters of jet fuel per kilometer. That's more than the fuel burn of the Boeing 777-200 (its competitor) that burns only 8.9 liters of jet fuel per hour.
For the first hour the fuel burn is approx 6000 pounds @ 4 USD /Gallon (check actual price for jet fuel) = $3,529.41 USD/Hr (first hour) for fuel burn only!
the Hourly fuel burn rate varies depending on altitude, speed, and amount of fuel left. On average, it will burn 20,000 lbs of fuel per hour.
Fuel Consumption: 479 gallons per hour
3051 Lit per hour