Level 3
A rectangular tank measuring 50 cm by 36 cm by 27 cm was 34 filled with water. The water was used to fill up some bottles of capacity 2 ℓ each. How many bottles were filled completely?
3 m
Level 3
A rectangular tank, measuring 30 cm by 25 cm by 40 cm, was filled with water. Ben poured all the water into 1.5 ℓ bottles. After filling 4 bottles, how many more bottles could Ben fill?
3 m
Level 3
A container measuring 25 cm by 16 cm by 48 cm was 13 filled with water at first. James poured some water into the container. In the end, the height of the water level in the container was 20 cm as shown.
  1. How much water did James pour into container? Give your answer in mℓ.
  2. James then poured all the water in the container into several identical jugs. Given that each jug can hold at least 1.25 ℓ of water, what is the least number of jugs he would need?
3 m
Level 3
A rectangular tank, measuring 20 cm by 12 cm by 15 cm, was completely filled with water. All the water was poured into identical cubical containers of side 8 cm. What was the least number of containers used?
3 m
Level 3
The figure is not drawn to scale. A tank has a square base area of 81 m2. It was filled with water to a height of 2 m. Freda added 18 pails of water and the height of the water level rose to 13 m. Find the volume of each pail. Give your answer in m3.
3 m
Level 3
A cylindrical dispenser of capacity 5.7 ℓ was filled with apple juice to its brim. The milk in the dispenser was then dispensed into a cubical container of sides 18 cm, through a tap flowing at a rate of 200 mℓ/min. After 15 min, the tap was turned off and the container was 23 full.
  1. What percentage of the milk in the cylindrical dispenser was left? Round off your answer to the nearest 2 decimal places.
  2. How many litres of milk were there in the container at first? (1 ℓ = 1000 cm3)
5 m
Level 3
Tank A measuring 50 cm by 46 cm by 15 cm contained 34 ℓ of water. Tank B measuring 40 cm by 30 cm by 35 cm contained 18 ℓ of water. Alan poured some water from Tank A into Tank B without spilling and the water level of Tank B rose to 28 cm. What was the height of water level left in Tank A?
4 m
Level 3
Figure A shows a rectangular container. It is 35 filled with water. The length of the container is 18 cm and its breadth is 3 cm.
  1. Find the capacity of the container in litres.
  2. All the water in the rectangular container is poured into another tank as shown in Figure B. Find the height that represents the water level of the amount of water in it.
4 m
Level 3
Container M and Container N are identical. Container M is filled with water to the brim and Container N is empty. Some water from Container M is poured into Container N such that the ratio of the volume of water remained in Container M to that in Container N is 3 : 2.
  1. How much water is poured into Container N?
  2. Find the height of water that remained in Container M.
4 m
Level 3
The figure, not drawn to scale, shows an empty water container made out of 2 different solid shapes. The total height of the figure is 24 cm. The bottom part of the figure is formed by a 12-cm cube. The top part of the figure is formed by a cuboid with the corners of its square base touching the midpoints of the edges of the cube. The figure on the right shows the view of the solid from the top. 2 litres of water is poured into the empty water container. Find the height of the water level from the base of the water container.
4 m