US Fluid Drams (fl-dr) to Cubic meters (m3) conversion

1 fl-dr = 0.000003696691 m3m3fl-dr
Formula
1 fl-dr = 0.000003696691 m3

Understanding US Fluid Drams to Cubic Meters Conversion

The US fluid dram (fl-dr) is a customary liquid measure equal to 1/8 US fluid ounce, about 3.6967 millilitres. The cubic meter (m³) is the SI derived unit of volume, equal to 1000 litres, and is the standard for water metering, industrial storage, and scientific reporting. Converting drams to cubic meters lets you express small apothecary volumes on the same scale as bulk metric quantities.

Conversion Formula

1 fl-dr=0.000003696691 m31\ \text{fl-dr} = 0.000003696691\ \text{m3}

To convert US Fluid Drams to Cubic meters, multiply by this factor:

m3=fl-dr×0.000003696691\text{m3} = \text{fl-dr} \times 0.000003696691

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 US Fluid Drams to Cubic meters.

m3=25×0.000003696691=0.0000924173 m3\text{m3} = 25 \times 0.000003696691 = 0.0000924173\ \text{m3}

How to Convert US Fluid Drams to Cubic Meters

Move a dram volume onto the SI cubic-meter scale in one multiplication.

  1. Start with drams: Record your quantity in US fluid drams.
  2. Multiply by 0.000003696691: This factor yields cubic meters.
  3. Expect a small value: A cubic meter is 1000 litres, so results are tiny for modest dram counts.
  4. Worked result: 25 fl-dr × 0.000003696691 = 0.0000924173 m³.

US Fluid Drams to Cubic meters conversion table

US Fluid Drams (fl-dr)Cubic meters (m3)
00
10.000003696691
20.000007393382
30.00001109007
40.00001478676
50.00001848346
60.00002218015
70.00002587684
80.00002957353
90.00003327022
100.00003696691
150.00005545037
200.00007393382
250.00009241728
300.0001109007
400.0001478676
500.0001848346
600.0002218015
700.0002587684
800.0002957353
900.0003327022
1000.0003696691
1500.0005545037
2000.0007393382
2500.0009241728
3000.001109007
4000.001478676
5000.001848346
6000.002218015
7000.002587684
8000.002957353
9000.003327022
10000.003696691
20000.007393382
30000.01109007
40000.01478676
50000.01848346
100000.03696691
250000.09241728
500000.1848346
1000000.3696691
2500000.9241728
5000001.848346
10000003.696691

What is the US Fluid Dram?

The US fluid dram (also spelled fluid drachm) is a small United States customary unit of liquid volume, historically important in pharmacy and medicine for dispensing doses of liquid medication.

Definition

The US fluid dram is defined as one eighth of a US fluid ounce, or equivalently 60 minims.

1 fl-dr=0.00369669 L1\ \text{fl-dr} = 0.00369669\ \text{L}

Since the US fluid ounce is exactly 29.5735295625 mL, a fluid dram equals 3.6966912 mL. The UK/imperial fluid drachm is slightly larger at about 3.5516 mL (1/8 of the imperial fluid ounce).

Origin and History

"Dram" derives from the Greek drachma, an ancient coin and weight. The apothecaries' system split the fluid ounce into 8 fluid drams and each dram into 60 minims, giving pharmacists a fine graduation for compounding and measuring liquid remedies.

Law and Notable Facts

The fluid dram is a legal US customary unit but is now largely obsolete in clinical practice, superseded by milliliters. Its legacy survives in the term "dram" for a small pour of whisky and in the traditional 8-dram, 1-fluid-ounce medicine bottle.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • A single US fluid dram is about 3.70 mL, roughly three-quarters of a metric teaspoon.
  • 8 US fluid drams equal 1 US fluid ounce (29.5735 mL).
  • 1 US fluid dram = 60 minims ≈ 0.75 teaspoon; 1 mL ≈ 0.2705 US fluid dram.

What is Cubic meters?

Let's explore the cubic meter, a fundamental unit for measuring volume. We'll look at its definition, how it's derived, and some real-world examples.

Definition of Cubic Meter

The cubic meter (symbol: m3m^3) is the SI derived unit of volume. It represents the volume of a cube with sides one meter in length. In simpler terms, imagine a box that's 1 meter wide, 1 meter long, and 1 meter high; the space inside that box is one cubic meter.

Formation of a Cubic Meter

A cubic meter is derived from the base SI unit for length, the meter (m). Since volume is a three-dimensional quantity, we multiply length by itself three times:

1m3=1m×1m×1m1 \, m^3 = 1 \, m \times 1 \, m \times 1 \, m

This means that a cubic meter represents the space occupied by a cube with sides of one meter each.

Volume Calculation with Cubic Meters

When calculating the volume of objects using cubic meters, various shapes may require different formulas to get accurate measures. Here are a few examples:

  • Cube: Volume = side3side^3. So, if the side is 2 meters, the volume is 23=8m32³ = 8 \, m^3.
  • Cuboid: Volume = length×width×heightlength \times width \times height. If the dimensions are 3 m, 2 m, and 1.5 m, then the volume is 3×2×1.5=9m33 \times 2 \times 1.5 = 9 \, m^3.
  • Cylinder: Volume = π×radius2×height\pi \times radius^2 \times height. Assuming radius is 1 m and height is 2 m, the volume is approximately π×12×26.28m3\pi \times 1² \times 2 \approx 6.28 \, m^3.
  • Sphere: Volume = 43×π×radius3\frac{4}{3} \times \pi \times radius^3. If the radius is 1 m, the volume is approximately 43×π×134.19m3\frac{4}{3} \times \pi \times 1³ \approx 4.19 \, m^3.

Real-World Examples of Cubic Meter Volumes

  • Water Tanks: A small household water tank might hold around 1 cubic meter of water.
  • Shipping Containers: Standard 20-foot shipping containers have an internal volume of approximately 33 cubic meters.
  • Concrete: When ordering concrete for a construction project, it is often specified in cubic meters. A small residential foundation might require 5-10 cubic meters of concrete.
  • Firewood: Firewood is often sold by the cubic meter or fractions thereof. A cubic meter of firewood is a substantial amount, enough to last for several weeks of heating in a stove.
  • Excavation: When digging a swimming pool, the amount of earth removed is measured in cubic meters.
  • Aquariums: A large home aquarium can hold around 1 cubic meter.

Interesting Facts

While no specific law is directly tied to the cubic meter itself, its importance lies in its use in various scientific and engineering calculations, where accurate volume measurements are crucial. Archimedes' principle, relating buoyancy to the volume of displaced fluid, is a classic example where volume, measured in cubic meters or related units, plays a central role. You can find out more about Archimedes' principle on websites such as Britannica.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many cubic meters are in a US fluid dram?

One US fluid dram equals about 0.000003696691 cubic meter, or 3.696691 × 10⁻⁶ m³.

How do I convert US fluid drams to cubic meters?

Multiply the dram count by 0.000003696691. For example, 1000 fl-dr equals about 0.00369669 m³.

How many fluid drams fill one cubic meter?

About 270,512 US fluid drams are needed to fill one cubic meter (which holds 1000 litres).

When would I use cubic meters here?

Cubic meters suit engineering, water-utility, and scientific contexts where even large dram totals must appear in SI volume units.

Is the cubic meter part of the SI system?

Yes. The cubic meter is the coherent SI unit of volume, whereas the fluid dram is a customary unit outside SI.

Complete US Fluid Drams conversion table

fl-dr
UnitResult
Cubic Millimeters (mm3)3696.691 mm3
Cubic Centimeters (cm3)3.696691 cm3
Cubic Decimeters (dm3)0.003696691 dm3
Millilitres (ml)3.696691 ml
Centilitres (cl)0.3696691 cl
Decilitres (dl)0.03696691 dl
Litres (l)0.003696691 l
Kilolitres (kl)0.000003696691 kl
Megalitres (Ml)3.696691e-9 Ml
Gigalitres (Gl)3.696691e-12 Gl
Cubic meters (m3)0.000003696691 m3
Cubic kilometers (km3)3.696691e-15 km3
Kryddmått (krm)3.696691 krm
Teskedar (tsk)0.7393382 tsk
Matskedar (msk)0.2464461 msk
Kaffekoppar (kkp)0.02464461 kkp
Glas (glas)0.01848346 glas
Kannor (kanna)0.001412568 kanna
Imperial Gallons (imp-gal)0.0008131584 imp-gal
Imperial Quarts (imp-qt)0.003252634 imp-qt
Imperial Pints (imp-pnt)0.006505267 imp-pnt
Imperial Fluid Ounces (imp-fl-oz)0.1301053 imp-fl-oz
Glasses (glass)0.01540288 glass
Board Feet (board-foot)0.001566569 board-foot
Acre-Feet (acre-foot)2.996956e-9 acre-foot
Teaspoons (tsp)0.75 tsp
Tablespoons (Tbs)0.25 Tbs
Cubic inches (in3)0.2255859 in3
Fluid Ounces (fl-oz)0.125 fl-oz
Cups (cup)0.015625 cup
Pints (pnt)0.0078125 pnt
Quarts (qt)0.00390625 qt
Gallons (gal)0.0009765625 gal
Cubic feet (ft3)0.0001305474 ft3
Cubic yards (yd3)0.00000483509 yd3
US Oil Barrels (bbl)0.00002325149 bbl
US Dry Gallons (gal-dry)0.0008392256 gal-dry
US Dry Quarts (qt-dry)0.003356902 qt-dry
US Dry Pints (pnt-dry)0.006713805 pnt-dry
US Bushels (bu)0.0001049032 bu
US Pecks (pk)0.0004196128 pk

Volume conversions