In order to actually answer this question, you would have needed to provide the length also. But to find the solution, you would need to know a few things.
Volume of a Rectangular Prism = length * width * height
Since you give the two dimensions width and height in feet, I'm going to assume the length would have also been in feet. If it isn't, you could easily just convert.
To find the volume of this shape, you would be multiplying them together. This would give you some number with the unit of feet cubed.
Once you have gotten this, it is just a simple matter of converting cubic feet to gallons. You can do this using the conversion factor 1 cubic foot = 7.48051948 gallons.
Tank is 40 feet high and holds 55,000 barrels.
About 7 feet for a WWII light tank.
approximately 2 ft diameter by 4 ft height, Its volume must be slightly more than 100 gallons to allow expansion in hot weather and room for vapor.
A rectangular tank that sits on 2' by 90' of real estate and is 36 inches deephas a volume of2' x 90' x 3' = 540 cubic feet = 4,039.48 gallons.That's the volume of the tank. I have no way of knowing how much water may bein it. It may even be full of something else, or it may be empty.
Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends - 1984 James in the Dark Pete's Feet was released on: USA: 1 November 2012
The dimensions of a 10,000 gallon oil tank are 120 inches wide by 17 feet tall. A 10,000 gallon oil tank empty weights about 8,500 pounds.
The volume of the tank does not provide enough information about it dimensions. It could be a squat tank with a large area or a tall but narrow tank.
To convert gallons to cubic feet, you can use the conversion factor of 1 gallon being approximately 0.1337 cubic feet. Therefore, a 100-gallon tank would hold about 13.37 cubic feet (100 gallons × 0.1337 cu ft/gallon). The pressure of 135 psi does not affect the volume in cubic feet; it only affects the density of the gas inside the tank. Thus, the tank still holds approximately 13.37 cubic feet of volume.
It can have infinitely many values. The surface area of a cylindrical tank can be changed - without affecting its volume - by making is short and squat or tall and thin.
Volume of a cylindrical tank 8 feet in diameter and 8 feet tall is pi x 16 square feet (radius squared) x 8 feet (height) = 402 cubic feet.
You need to specify the shape of the tank so that its volume can be calculated. Once you have the volume, one U.S. gallon 0.1337 cubic feet.
Volume = pi*52*10 = 785.398 cubic feet to 3 decimal places
The Sherman tank is nine feet tall.
Dimensions are 28'' wide, 45" tall, and 60" long for a 275 gallon fuel tank.
The most common 1000 gallon oil storage tank is a flat-ended cylinder 48 inches in diameter. A gallon is 231 cubic inches. The area of a 48-inch circle (radius = 24") is pi*24² = 1809.56 in². 231,000 / 1809.56 = 127.7", or just under 10'-8". The nominal length is 10.5 feet.
The M4 Sherman tank was nine feet tall.
1.5 hours