A ten minute shower can use less water than a full bath. With a new 2.5 gallon-per-minute (low-flow) shower head, a 10-minute shower will use about 25 gallons of water, saving you five gallons of water over a typical bath. A new showerhead also will save energy — up to $145 each year on electricity — beating out both the bath and an old-fashioned showerhead. To avoid moisture problems, control humidity in your bathroom by running your ventilating fan during and 15 minutes after showers and baths.
4 gallons if head delivers 2 gallons/minute
Easy to figure out 2.2 * 8 = 17.6
A shower head would use between 60 to 75 gallons for a 30 minute shower.
Usually about 2.5 gallons per minute
2.95
depends on how much you want, like i have 700 gallons.
Can't say because this depends on the flow coming out of the shower head. If the flow is 1ltr per minute then in 10 minutes you will use 10 litres The average shower in the US flows at a rate of 7.9 liters per minute, or 2.1 gallons per minute. A ten minute shower would consume 79 liters or 21 gallons of water.
It would depend on the shower speed setting
This is impossible to say as all showers are different.
That depends on the fuel and the cost of the fuel and the temperature of mains water and the shower.
There is no relationship between millilitres and a shower.You are possibly asking how much water does it take to shower, in that case- the average shower head discharges about 1.5 - 2 gallons of water per minute.
it depends on the state you ;ive in , but i would say around 6 dollars a month.