Level 3
A rectangular tank 38 cm long, 23 cm wide and 18 cm high is 45 full of water. When 14 of the water was removed from the tank, how many ℓ of water was left in the tank? Express your answer as a decimal correct to 2 decimal places.
4 m
Level 3
A rectangular tank measuring 25 cm by 12 cm by 10 cm is 25 filled with water. All the water is then poured into a cubical tank with a side measuring 14 cm. How much more water is needed to fill the cubical tank completely? Give your answer in litres.
4 m
Level 3
A rectangular container 40 cm long, 30 cm wide and 25 cm high is 45 filled with water. When some of the water is poured into an empty rectangular glass tank until it is completely full, 4 ℓ of water is left in the container.
  1. How many litres of water was there in the container at first?
  2. What is the height of the glass tank if it is 50 cm long and 25 cm wide?
4 m
Level 3
The figure shows a sealed bottle of height 35 cm. It is made from two containers. The top container is in the form of a cuboid with a square base. The bottom container is in the form of a cube of side 20cm. The height of the water in the bottle (shown in Figure A) is 18 cm.

When the same bottle is turned upside down (shown in Figure B), the height of the water in the bottle is 29 cm. How much water can the sealed bottle hold if it is completely filled?
4 m
Level 3
Container A and B are identical containers with the same base area and height. Container A is filled to the brim with water while Container B is empty. After 240 cm3 of water is poured into Container B from Container A, the depth of water in Container B is 14 the depth of water in Container A. If the height of the container is 25 cm, what is the base area of Container B?
4 m
Level 3
Tank X was filled with water with water up to a height of 11 cm while Tank Y and Z were empty. Water was poured out into Tank Y and Z such that the water in all tanks were the same height in the end. How much water was poured out of Tank X?
4 m
Level 3
Justin and Wesley each had the same volume of water. The water was used to pour into identical bottles. Justin filled up 16 bottles and had 4.8 ℓ of water left. Wesley filled up 8 bottles and had 6.4 ℓ of water left.
  1. What was the capacity of each bottle? Give your answer in millilitres.
  2. What was the total volume of water Justin and Wesley had at first? Give your answer in litres.
4 m
Level 3
At first, a pot contained 25 ℓ of water. Keisha added another 12 ℓ of water into the pot. Then she used 29 of all the water in the pot. How much water did Keisha use? Express your answer as a fraction in its simplest form.
4 m
Level 3 PSLE
Jenny has two types of bottles, large and small. She filled 3 large bottles and 7 small bottles with 10.5 ℓ of the drink she made. With the remaining drink, she could not fill another large bottle as she was short of 0.3 ℓ. Thus, she filled another small bottle and had 0.6 ℓ left over.
  1. How many litres of drink did the large bottle hold more than the small bottle?
  2. How many litres of drink did a small bottle hold?
4 m
Level 3
A rectangular tank measuring 25 cm by 20 cm by 16 cm is half filled with water. If 3 identical cubes each measuring 10 cm by 10 cm by 10 cm are placed inside the water, find the new height of the water level.
5 m