US Pecks (pk) to Cubic meters (m3) conversion

1 pk = 0.008809768 m3m3pk
Formula
1 pk = 0.008809768 m3

Understanding US Pecks to Cubic Meters Conversion

A US peck (pk) is a customary dry-measure unit of about 8.810 litres, a quarter of a bushel used for produce, while a cubic meter (m3) is the SI base unit of volume, equal to 1000 litres or the volume of a one-meter cube. Converting pecks to cubic meters restates a dry produce volume in the standard metric unit used for shipping, bulk storage, and engineering calculations.

Conversion Formula

1 pk=0.00880977 m31\ \text{pk} = 0.00880977\ \text{m3}

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

m3=pk×0.008809768\text{m3} = \text{pk} \times 0.008809768

Step-by-Step Example

Convert 25 US Pecks to Cubic meters.

m3=25×0.008809768=0.220244 m3\text{m3} = 25 \times 0.008809768 = 0.220244\ \text{m3}

How to Convert US Pecks to Cubic Meters

Restate a dry peck volume in SI cubic meters with a single multiplication.

  1. Record the pecks: Begin with your dry volume in US pecks (pk).
  2. Multiply by 0.008809768: This gives the equivalent cubic meters.
  3. Solve the example: For 25 pk, compute 25×0.00880976825 \times 0.008809768.
  4. Report the result: The answer is 0.220244 cubic meters.

US Pecks to Cubic meters conversion table

US Pecks (pk)Cubic meters (m3)
00
10.008809768
20.01761954
30.0264293
40.03523907
50.04404884
60.05285861
70.06166837
80.07047814
90.07928791
100.08809768
150.1321465
200.1761954
250.2202442
300.264293
400.3523907
500.4404884
600.5285861
700.6166837
800.7047814
900.7928791
1000.8809768
1501.321465
2001.761954
2502.202442
3002.64293
4003.523907
5004.404884
6005.285861
7006.166837
8007.047814
9007.928791
10008.809768
200017.61954
300026.4293
400035.23907
500044.04884
1000088.09768
25000220.2442
50000440.4884
100000880.9768
2500002202.442
5000004404.884
10000008809.768

What is the US Peck?

The US peck is a United States customary unit of dry volume, equal to a quarter of a bushel, used for measuring fruit, vegetables, and grain. It sits between the dry gallon and the bushel in the dry-measure system.

Definition

The US peck is defined as one quarter of a US bushel, or 8 US dry quarts, equal to exactly 537.605 cubic inches.

1 pk=8.80977 L1\ \text{pk} = 8.80977\ \text{L}

With the bushel fixed at 2150.42 in³, a peck equals 2150.42 ÷ 4 = 537.605 in³ = 8809.77 cm³. The US peck is about 3% smaller than the imperial peck (9.09218 L).

Origin and History

The peck is an old English dry measure, attested since the 14th century and long used for grain and produce. Its US form is tied to the Winchester bushel retained from colonial England, while the imperial peck follows Britain's 1824 reform.

Law and Notable Facts

The peck endures in the tongue-twister "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers" and in US orchard sales, where apples are still sold by the peck and half-peck. It remains a legal customary unit defined via the international inch.

Real-World Examples and Conversions

  • A peck of apples weighs roughly 10–12 lb and fills about 8.81 liters.
  • 1 US peck = 8 US dry quarts = 16 US dry pints = 8.80977 L.
  • 4 US pecks make 1 US bushel; 1 liter ≈ 0.11351 US peck.

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 one US peck?

One US peck equals about 0.008809768 cubic meters, since a peck holds roughly 8.810 litres and a cubic meter is 1000 litres.

How do I convert cubic meters back to US pecks?

Multiply the cubic-meter figure by 113.5104, so 1 m3 contains about 113.5 pecks.

Why use cubic meters for produce volumes?

Cubic meters are the SI standard for bulk volume in shipping, warehousing, and engineering, so this conversion helps integrate peck-based produce figures into metric logistics.

About how many pecks make a cubic meter?

Roughly 113.5 pecks fill one cubic meter, because each peck is under nine-thousandths of a cubic meter.

What is 50 US pecks in cubic meters?

Fifty pecks equal 50×0.008809768=0.44048850 \times 0.008809768 = 0.440488 cubic meters.

Complete US Pecks conversion table

pk
UnitResult
Cubic Millimeters (mm3)8809768 mm3
Cubic Centimeters (cm3)8809.768 cm3
Cubic Decimeters (dm3)8.809768 dm3
Millilitres (ml)8809.768 ml
Centilitres (cl)880.9768 cl
Decilitres (dl)88.09768 dl
Litres (l)8.809768 l
Kilolitres (kl)0.008809768 kl
Megalitres (Ml)0.000008809768 Ml
Gigalitres (Gl)8.809768e-9 Gl
Cubic meters (m3)0.008809768 m3
Cubic kilometers (km3)8.809768e-12 km3
Kryddmått (krm)8809.768 krm
Teskedar (tsk)1761.954 tsk
Matskedar (msk)587.3178 msk
Kaffekoppar (kkp)58.73178 kkp
Glas (glas)44.04884 glas
Kannor (kanna)3.366361 kanna
Imperial Gallons (imp-gal)1.937878 imp-gal
Imperial Quarts (imp-qt)7.751512 imp-qt
Imperial Pints (imp-pnt)15.50302 imp-pnt
Imperial Fluid Ounces (imp-fl-oz)310.0605 imp-fl-oz
Glasses (glass)36.70736 glass
Board Feet (board-foot)3.733368 board-foot
Acre-Feet (acre-foot)0.000007142195 acre-foot
Teaspoons (tsp)1787.362 tsp
Tablespoons (Tbs)595.7874 Tbs
Cubic inches (in3)537.605 in3
Fluid Ounces (fl-oz)297.8937 fl-oz
Cups (cup)37.23671 cup
Pints (pnt)18.61835 pnt
Quarts (qt)9.309177 qt
Gallons (gal)2.327294 gal
Cubic feet (ft3)0.311114 ft3
Cubic yards (yd3)0.01152274 yd3
US Oil Barrels (bbl)0.05541177 bbl
US Dry Gallons (gal-dry)2 gal-dry
US Dry Quarts (qt-dry)8 qt-dry
US Dry Pints (pnt-dry)16 pnt-dry
US Bushels (bu)0.25 bu
US Fluid Drams (fl-dr)2383.149 fl-dr