Imperial quart to Cubic foot
imp qt
ft³
Conversion History
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|---|---|---|
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Quick Reference Table (Imperial quart to Cubic foot)
| Imperial quart (imp qt) | Cubic foot (ft³) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0.02006795665416252817 |
| 1 | 0.04013591330832505633 |
| 2 | 0.08027182661665011267 |
| 4 | 0.16054365323330022533 |
| 8 | 0.32108730646660045067 |
About Imperial quart (imp qt)
The imperial quart is a unit of volume equal to one quarter of an imperial gallon, approximately 1.136 liters. It is used in the UK and Commonwealth countries for liquid measurement, though everyday use has declined since metrication. An imperial quart is larger than both the US liquid quart (946 mL) and just slightly larger than one liter. Historically, motor oil was sold in imperial quart cans in the UK; today, liter bottles have replaced them.
Pre-metrication UK motor oil was sold in imperial quart cans. An imperial quart is just over two UK pints.
About Cubic foot (ft³)
A cubic foot (ft³) is the volume of a cube with 1-foot sides, equal to approximately 28.317 liters or 7.48 US gallons. It is used in the United States for natural gas billing, refrigerator capacity, aquarium size, concrete orders, and shipping container dimensions. Refrigerators are rated in cubic feet of storage, natural gas consumption is billed in cubic feet, and HVAC airflow is measured in cubic feet per minute (CFM).
A full-size refrigerator is typically 18–28 ft³. Natural gas is billed in CCF (hundreds of cubic feet) in the US.
Imperial quart – Frequently Asked Questions
How many milliliters are in an imperial quart?
One imperial quart equals approximately 1,136.5 mL (about 1.137 liters). It is larger than both the US liquid quart (946.4 mL) and slightly larger than a liter.
How does an imperial quart compare to a US quart?
An imperial quart (1,136.5 mL) is about 20% larger than a US liquid quart (946.4 mL) — the same proportion as between the imperial and US gallons.
Is the imperial quart still used?
The imperial quart is rarely used in modern everyday life in the UK, Australia, or Canada following metrication. It may appear in older recipes, industrial standards, and some agricultural trade documents.
How many imperial fluid ounces are in an imperial quart?
One imperial quart contains 40 imperial fluid ounces (1 quart = 2 pints = 40 fl oz). A US quart = 32 US fluid ounces.
What countries use the imperial quart?
No major country officially uses the imperial quart for trade or labeling today. The UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand have all metricated. The unit may persist in informal speech or older documentation.
Cubic foot – Frequently Asked Questions
How many liters are in a cubic foot?
One cubic foot equals approximately 28.317 liters. Since 1 foot = 30.48 cm, 1 ft³ = 30.48³ cm³ = 28,316.8 cm³ = 28.317 liters.
Why is natural gas measured in cubic feet in the US?
The US gas industry adopted cubic feet before metrication became widespread. Natural gas is billed in CCF (hundred cubic feet) or therms (≈ 100 ft³ by energy content). Metric countries use cubic meters.
What does cubic feet mean for refrigerators?
Refrigerator capacity is rated in cubic feet of internal storage. A compact dorm fridge is 1–4 ft³; a standard family fridge is 18–22 ft³; a large French door model can exceed 28 ft³.
What is CFM (cubic feet per minute)?
CFM measures volumetric airflow rate. HVAC systems, range hoods, and fans are rated in CFM. A typical home range hood requires 100–600 CFM; a whole-home HVAC system might move 2,000 CFM.
How many US gallons are in a cubic foot?
One cubic foot equals approximately 7.48 US liquid gallons. This is commonly used in plumbing, aquarium sizing, and pool volume calculations.