25-30 gallons.
Depends on the head. Reg. heads about 2.5 per min. x 10 = 25 gal.
4 gallons if head delivers 2 gallons/minute
A shower head would use between 60 to 75 gallons for a 30 minute shower.
The amount of water saved by taking a 5-minute shower instead of a 10-minute shower depends on the flow rate of the showerhead. For example, if the showerhead has a flow rate of 2.5 gallons per minute, a 10-minute shower would use 25 gallons, while a 5-minute shower would use 12.5 gallons. Therefore, you would save approximately 12.5 gallons of water by reducing your shower time by 5 minutes.
6.3 gallons of water us used
depends on how much you want, like i have 700 gallons.
The average shower uses about 2.1 gallons of water per minute. If you take a 5-minute shower, that amounts to approximately 10.5 gallons per shower. Over the course of a year, if you shower daily, you would use around 3,832.5 gallons (10.5 gallons x 365 days). To determine how much you waste would depend on what you consider waste, but if you compare it to more efficient shower habits, you might see a difference in water use.
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.
Obviously it partly depends on the shower head, but most will give about 2.5 gallons per minute, so you are using about 12 gallons of water, possibly about 8 - 9 of it hot.Place a 1 liter bottle below the shower and measure how many seconds it will require to fill it. Then:Number of gallons in five minutes = 78,1/ Number of secondsAn average shower head emits about 1.3 -1.5 gallons per minute, so that would be 7 -8 gallons.
Usually about 2.5 gallons per minute
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.
Aim the shower into a bucket. Let it run for one minute. Measure how much water that has collected in the bucket. Now you have the flow per minute. Next, time yourself when you take a shower. Multiply the minutes spent showering with the flow rate to find the total amount of water used.
millions of gallons of water