23/8
Depends on the depth. If it is 4 feet deep and it is cicular with a diameter of 24 feet then you have approx. 13,553 gallons of water. If it is 3 feet deep then you have approx. 10,152 gallons of water.
1 acre is 6,272,640 square inches. Since you want to cover it one inch deep you need 6,272,640 cubic inches of water. There are 231 cubic inches in a gallon. So divide 6,272,640 by 231 and you get 27,154.2857 gallons! HOWEVER: If you want to save water, consider this: When water freezes, it increases in volume about 9%. So if you used ICE to cover your acre and only needed the ice to be 1 inch deep, you could use 9% less water to start with! (I'll let you do the math on that.) Ice is still water, so unless you are asked to use LIQUID water this question has 2 answers.
.4 gallons in a quart
how big is the barrel..... Standard barrel is 55 gallons. If you are asking how many gallons from a barrel of crude-restate.
60 US gallons is about 50 Imperial gallons (49.96).
25000 gallons
24,685.79 gallons
Cannot be answered without knowing the shallow and deep end depths.
20000
An in-ground pool that is 40 feet by 20 feet with the shallow end being 3ft deep and the deep end being 9ft deep has a volume of approximately 35,900 US gallons. (The depth of variable depth pools is generally calculated by adding the shallow and deep ends and dividing by two).
Not enough information. need length and width
If the pool is 8 feet in the deep end and 3 feet in the shallow end, the total volume will be about 21,722 gallons of water.
If the pool is 8 feet in the deep end and 3 feet in the shallow end, the total volume will be about 38,507 gallons of water.
14,949 gallons. 4,147,200 in^3, with 0.00360464866 gallons per in^3.
18,691.2 gallons if shallow end 4'
10000000 gallons of water ;) it's true, my teacher told me
10,710. 10,710. The calculation for a rectangle pool is: ((Shallow end depth + deep end depth) / 2) * length * width) = pool volume in cubic feet Pool cubic feet * 7.5 = gallons of water the pool holds