Liter

A liter is a unit of measurement of volume and is symbolically denoted by the letter “L”. It is technically not an SI unit of volume but is accepted for use with the International System of Units. The value of 1 liter is equal to 1 dm3, 1000 cm3, 1/1000 m3, 0.035314 ft3, 0.264172 US liquid gallon. It is used to measure liquid volumes and also some non-liquid volumes, such as the size of car trunks, refrigerators, backpacks, etc.

1 cu. ft = 28.316846592 L

Use our calculator to convert litre to millilitre.

Convert Cubic Feet To Liter (ft³ to l)

A cubic foot and a liter are units that are used to measure a unit volume. Volume is a mathematical quantity that is used to describe the amount of space enclosed by a three-dimensional object of any shape. The volume of an object is measured in terms of cubic units such as m3, cm3, ft3, yd3, in3, etc., and is also referred to as capacity. For instance, the amount of water that a conical flask can hold is measured by its volume. 

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Cubic Foot

A cubic foot is a unit to measure a unit volume and is symbolically written as ft3. It is used to measure the volume of a cube having a length of one foot on each side. It is a unit to measure a unit volume in the Imperial and United States customary systems. One cubic foot is written as cu. ft. and ft3. The value of 1 cubic foot is equal to 28316.8466 cm3, 0.02831685 m3, 28.3168 L, and 7.48052 US liquid gallons....

Liter

A liter is a unit of measurement of volume and is symbolically denoted by the letter “L”. It is technically not an SI unit of volume but is accepted for use with the International System of Units. The value of 1 liter is equal to 1 dm3, 1000 cm3, 1/1000 m3, 0.035314 ft3, 0.264172 US liquid gallon. It is used to measure liquid volumes and also some non-liquid volumes, such as the size of car trunks, refrigerators, backpacks, etc....

Conversion Table

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Solved Examples based on the conversion of Cubic Foot To Liter

Example 1: Convert 18 cubic feet to liters....

FAQs based on the conversion of Cubic Foot To Liter

Question 1: How much water can 1 cubic foot hold?...

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