1 US gallon of Water, liquid at 20 C to pound
Convert 1 US gallon of Water, liquid at 20 C to pound. Density 998 kg/m³ — with range, source confidence, and step-by-step engineering calculations.
Water, liquid at 20 C gal to lb
Computed result
1 gal to lb
8 lb
Water, liquid at 20 C: 1 gal becomes 8 lb.
Reverse check
8 lb back to gal
1 gal
Reverse check returns approximately 1 gal for Water, liquid at 20 C.
All output units
Same Water, liquid at 20 C calculation shown across compatible weight output units, including bulk and industrial units when relevant.
Formula
Calculation steps
Unit breakdown
Unit and density definitions
Material comparison
Compares Water, liquid at 20 C with nearby fluid materials for the same input.
Material comparison
Compares Water, liquid at 20 C with nearby fluid materials for the same input.
Density range and precision
Common values
Common Water, liquid at 20 C conversions from gal to lb.
6 computed rows use the same density and unit factors as the converter.
Nearby values
Nearby values around 1 gal.
Density range table
Low, typical, and high density cases for Water, liquid at 20 C.
Shows how much the answer moves when density varies for Water, liquid at 20 C.
Output scale
Computed output curve for Water, liquid at 20 C using 998 kg/m3 and representative gal values for this unit family.
Output scale
Conversion graph path
- 1galNormalize the entered unit to the SI base side.
- 2densityApply Water, liquid at 20 C density: 998 kg/m3.
- 3lbConvert the computed SI result into the selected output unit.
Real-world context
Metric and imperial context
Contextual examples
Common mistakes
Industry applications
User tips
Notable value context
Confusion to avoid
FAQ
A: Because gal to lb depends on density. Water, liquid at 20 C uses 998 kg/m3 here, while another material can produce a very different weight.
A: The typical density is 998 kg/m3. The listed practical range is 995-1000 kg/m3.
A: Reference liquid near room temperature. The main variation drivers are temperature, concentration, purity, and product grade.
A: No. US short tons and metric tonnes are different. Always check the selected output unit.
A: Use it for planning and checking. Contract, safety, freight, or lab work should use supplier, lab, or specification density.
A: Mass equals volume multiplied by density. The engine also converts the selected units before and after the density step.
A: A normal converter changes units inside one dimension. This page crosses volume and weight by using a material density source.
A: Compare Water, liquid at 20 C against nearby fluid materials, or switch the output unit to see the same result in another weight or volume unit.
A: It tells you whether the density is a reference value, engineering estimate, or variable bulk estimate.
Water, liquid at 20 C — density grade comparison
Water, liquid at 20 C density varies. Always use supplier or contract density for critical quantities.
Water, liquid at 20 C — weight per standard container
Container weights for Water, liquid at 20 C at typical density 998 kg/m³.
Water, liquid at 20 C — industry standard quantities
Standard industry quantities for Water, liquid at 20 C at 998 kg/m³.
Fluid materials — density comparison
Water, liquid at 20 C at 998 kg/m³ compared to 12 fluid materials.
Fluid materials — density comparison
Converting 1-gal-to-lb of water-20c