This is easier using Metric system where1litre =1000 cubic centimetres so depending on the shape you can work out the volume eg box shape length X breadth X height so a box 10cm X 10cm X10cm =1000cm = 1litre
19l
foolish!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 at its brim we'll come to knw when d bucket is full stupid!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Yes you are). Actually the correct answer is one inch below the brim. This was calculated by weight over several five gallon buckets.
A gallon of water weighs about 8.34 pounds. If you have a good sized bucket with a gallon of water in it and you put a 5-pound fish in the bucket, you'll have a bucket that weighs about 13.34 pounds (plus the weight of the bucket). That's as long as the bucket doesn't overflow. The fish will (usually) be neutrally bouyant in the water, and it will be essentially weightless in that water. But its weight will add to that of the water in the bucket. No, it won't weigh 15 pounds, but it will weigh in as suggested. However, the weight of the water itself will not change.
about 40 lbs.
$48,000.00
you fill the 3 gallon bucket into the 5 gallon bucket twice 2 *3 6 gallons but the 5 gallon will only overflow once it hits 5 gallons. You get the 1 gallon half in the 3 gallon bucket and dump the water out of the 5 gallon bucket. You pour the 1 gallon left from the 3 gallon bucket into the 5 gallon bucket and then refill the 3 gallon bucket and put the 3 gallons in making 4 gallons.
11 3/4 top x 10 3/8 bottom x 14 1/2 deep in
First, fill up the 5 gallon bucket. Then, pour the contents in the 5 gallon bucket into the 3 gallon bucket. This leaves 2 gallons left in the 5 gallon bucket. Pour the 2 gallons into the 3rd container. Now, fill the 5 gallon bucket again and pour the full 5 gallons into the 3rd container. This gives you 7 gallons.
Roughly? And I repeat roughly? Twelve inches wide, fifteen inches deep.
Fill the 1 gallon bucket and ignore the other.
The number of nickels in a five-gallon bucket depends on how tightly they are packed. A standard nickel has a diameter of about 0.83 inches and a thickness of 1.95 mm. Roughly estimating, a five-gallon bucket can hold about 1,600 to 2,000 nickels, assuming they are loosely packed. However, this number can vary based on packing efficiency and the exact dimensions of the bucket.
can't get 6 gallons of water in a 4 gallon bucket
If filled, 2 gallons.
Depends on the bucket. Usually 1 gallon or more, but there are smaller buckets.
It depends on its cross section.
# Start with empty buckets, and carry them to the well. # (Note that the larger is the 7-gallon bucket, and the smaller is the 4-gallon bucket.) # Fill the 4-gallon bucket with water to the top. # Empty all the water from the 4-gallon bucket into the 7-gallon bucket. # (Note that there is room in the 7-gallon bucket for exactly 3 more gallons.) # Fill the 4-gallon bucket again. # Pour from the 4-gallon bucket into the 7-gallon bucket all the water that will fit, spilling none. # (Note that since there was room for only 3 more gallons in the 7-gallon bucket, you now have 1 gallon left in the 4-gallon bucket.) # Dump out all the water from the 7-gallon bucket. (Pour it back into the well or onto some flowers so it's not wasted.) # Pour the 1 gallon of water that remains in the 4-gallon bucket into the empty 7-gallon bucket. # Refill the 4-gallon bucket completely. # Pour all the 4 gallons from the 4-gallon bucket into the 7-gallon bucket. # (Note that since the 7-gallon bucket had 1 gallon already and you added 4 gallons, you now have 5 gallons of water in the 7-gallon bucket!) # Bring back your 7-gallon bucket that's holding exactly 5 gallons of water. (Bring your 4-gallon bucket back too, in case you want to play again!)
fill the 7 gallon bucket, dump it into the 5 gallon bucket and save the remaining 2 gallons, repeat and you have 4 gallons.