Assuming that the corn is shelled and that the drum is filled to level full and is precisely 30 gallon capacity and that the corn meets minimum test weight standards, then it would hold 3.75 bushels.
Answer ON PAPER: 1728 cubic inches in a cubic foot 7.48 gallons in a cubic foot. 7.9 ft3 in a 55-gallon drum One bushel is 1.24 approx cubic feet. 6.37 bushels per 55-gallon drum. 56 pounds is a bushel 356 lbs in a drum of corn. 5.6 drums in a ton of corn. 35.7 bushels of corn in a ton. IN REALITY: Grain elevators measure bushels by weight. Actual weight may vary -- Between 350 and 400 pounds can fit in a 55 gallon drum So 350/56 = 6.25 bushels by weight. or 400/56 = 7.14 bushels by weight
A bushel is a set measure of volume equal to 1.25 cubic feet so and there are 0.156 cubic feet per gallon so 5 bushels of grain would fit in a 40 gallon drum which in the case of dry corn would weigh 280 pounds.
About 7 bushels
16
fifty thousand bushels in a corn contract
Approximately 8,270.35 bushels.
9,915,051,000 bushels.
One contract on the Chicago exchange is 50,000 bushels.
1,575,300,000 bushels, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
dont know 4-8 people 1-2 meals depending on this 4 big portion........................8 i would small to ok
For the 2009 crop season, Texas' average corn yield was 108 bushels per acre.