minimum 2,500 m3 (88,000 cu ft) or
2,500,000 L (550,000 imp gal; 660,000 US gal) or
138,888,888.889 mol,
depending on depth
Note only minimum is specified, depth can be greater and so can gallons as long as it meets minimum requirement.
This question is not easily answered because Olympic size only refers to the width and length, not depth. So variation in depth can greatly affect the answer. I happened to do maintainance for a university olympic sized pool years ago. It was 3 ft or 1m at the shallow end an 12ft or 4m at the deep end. It came in at just under 1/2 million gallons.
10. there are 10 gallons of water in an Olympic sized pool.
Your welcome.
actually, in some rare cases, the flea crosses the golden gate bridge, causing the pool size to go all crazy, but it all depends on how you butter your bread.
I would say probably around 50-200 gallons.
depends on how big the swimming pool is
An Olympic swimming pool is a standard size so you must take the legnth times the width times the depth and convert the cubic yards to gallons.
Around 110,000 depending on depth and 6 lanes
250,000 gallons. :)
440,000
jjh
Since 1 gallon equals 90,840 drops and 1 Olympic sized swimming pool has 660,430 gallons, there are 59,993,461,200 drops in an Olympic size swimming pool.
Depends on the pool you're comparing it to..
Swimming, synchronized swimming, diving, and water polo.
How many gallons of water for a 15'x30' swimming pool?
600,000 gallons
Swimming has been held at every Olympic games since 1896. Open water swimming was added in the 2008 Olympics.
Olympic swimming pools use about 650000 gallons of water, so if you're trying to shock one using 10% liquid chlorine, you would need about 200 gallons of liquid shock - or if you're only adding choline as a primary sanitizer, not as a shock, you'd use about 65 gallons.
Yes.
Swimming Water polo Diving Synchronised Swimming
repeat
depends on size.
Not sure, but they water the swimming pools.