You need three measurements, length, width, and depth, to calculate the volume of the pool
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∙ 15y agoTo fill up a 12 foot swimming pool, you would need approximately 6,900 gallons of water.
That depends on what body of water you are swimming into. In most cases, swimming in a deep river or deep lake can get you drowned in the water because it is so large and unclear. If it is a pool, then it is ok because you can see clearly and a lot of athletics can swim in pools as much as 50 ft deep.
newtest3 Any object will float better in salt water. It is denser, and pushes the object, (an egg in this case) To the surface of the water. Have you ever tried to float in the swimming pool? In the ocean? Well the ocean is much easier for this reason. Next time you go swimming, try to be the egg!Remember... Oogla knows all!
A 5-inch pipe will hold approximately 0.36 gallons of water per linear foot. This calculation is based on the formula for calculating the volume of a cylinder (V = πr^2h), where the radius (r) is half the diameter of the pipe (2.5 inches) and the height (h) is 1 foot.
If the bottle has a capacity of 100 cm3, you would expect to be able to fill it with 100 cm3 of water.
To fill a water balloon, stretch the opening of the balloon around a faucet or hose nozzle. Turn on the water, allowing the balloon to fill up to the desired size before tying a knot at the end to secure it.
5300 gallons
To give you an idea, a 36-foot by 18-foot by 5-foot deep pool takes about 24,000 gallons of water to fill.
7.48 US gallons of water.
Depends on the depth of the pool
One foot is 30.45cm if I am not mistaken. That is 3.45dm One liter of water fits in one cubic decimeter. The rest is up to you.
About 18,000 gallons.
Diameter x Diamater X Depth X 5.2
if it's 4 ft deep 21,139.948 gal.
It depends, what shape is the pool, then i can tell you. =)
To calculate the volume of dirt needed to fill a circular area, you first need to find the area of the circle (πr^2, where r is the radius). In this case, for a 14-foot circle, the radius is 7 feet. Once you find the area, you can calculate the volume of dirt needed based on the desired depth of filling the circle.
A 20 foot round pool has a radius of 3.2 feet. So the pool has a volume of pi*r2*h = 101.86 cubic ft approx.
just about enough to fill 2 swimming pools.