Instant · Precise · Universal
47 units available
6 categories total
To liters: multiply by 28.3168. To gallons (US): multiply by 7.48052. To cubic meters: multiply by 0.0283168.
1 ft³ = 1,728 in³ = 28.3168 L = 0.0283168 m³. There are 27 ft³ in one cubic yard.
For example, 1 Cubic Foot (ft³) = 2872.519483 Dessertspoon (US) (dsp (US)).
| Cubic Foot (ft³) | Dessertspoon (US) (dsp (US)) |
|---|---|
| 0.1 | 287.2519483 |
| 0.5 | 1436.259741 |
| 1 | 2872.519483 |
| 2 | 5745.038965 |
| 5 | 14362.59741 |
| 10 | 28725.19483 |
| 25 | 71812.98707 |
| 50 | 143625.9741 |
| 100 | 287251.9483 |
| 500 | 1436259.741 |
| 1000 | 2872519.483 |
The cubic foot is an imperial unit of volume equal to the space occupied by a cube one foot on each side (1,728 cubic inches).
1 ft³ = 1,728 in³ = 28.3168 L = 0.0283168 m³. There are 27 ft³ in one cubic yard.
To liters: multiply by 28.3168. To gallons (US): multiply by 7.48052. To cubic meters: multiply by 0.0283168.
Natural gas measurement, refrigerator and freezer capacities, moving truck sizes, and concrete volume estimation.
One cubic foot of water weighs 62.4 pounds. The average American household uses about 80,000 ft³ of natural gas per year.
Confusing ft³ with ft² (volume vs. area). Also, assuming 1 ft³ = 1 gallon — it actually holds about 7.48 gallons.
A basketball is roughly 0.44 ft³. A standard moving box (medium) is about 3 ft³. A cubic foot holds about 7.5 gallons.
The US dessertspoon is a unit of volume approximately double a teaspoon, equal to about 9.858 milliliters, or 2 US teaspoons.
1 US dsp ≈ 2 US tsp ≈ 2/3 US tbsp ≈ 9.858 mL.
To mL: multiply by 9.858. To teaspoons (US): multiply by 2. To tablespoons (US): multiply by 0.667.
Occasionally used in British/Australian recipes that have been adapted for US kitchens, and in traditional herbal medicine dosing.
The dessertspoon is a standard part of a formal European place setting, positioned between the soup spoon and teaspoon.
Confusing with a tablespoon — a dessertspoon is about 2/3 of a tablespoon, not half.
Think of the dessertspoon as 'double a teaspoon' — roughly 10 mL. It's the forgotten middle sibling of measuring spoons.



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