Level 3
The figure is not drawn to scale. It shows a container made of two connected cubical tanks, A and B. Tank A is sealed at the top and completely filled to the brim. Tank B is 35 filled with 129600 mℓ of water. The height of the water level in Tank B is 1 cm higher than that in Tank A. The height of Tank B is 60 cm. Water is then drained from the container and the height of the water level from the base falls to 30 cm.
  1. What is the capacity of Tank B?
  2. What is the volume of water in the tank now in litres?
5 m
Level 3
Mrs Tan had 10 ℓ orange juice. She used 12 of the orange juice for a picnic and 25 ℓ of the remaining orange juice to bake orange-flavoured cookies. How much orange juice did she have left? Give your answer in millilitres.
4 m
Level 3 PSLE
The figure shows the amount of water in two rectangular Tanks, A and B, at first.
Ray poured 14 of the water from A into B to fill it to the top, without overflowing.
  1. How much water was there in A at first?
  2. Ray then poured all the water from B into A. 720 cm3 of water overflowed from A. What was the height of A?
5 m
Level 3
The figure is not drawn to scale. It shows an empty container made up of a cuboid, measuring 40 cm by 25 cm by 25 cm and 2 similar cubes of sides 5 cm. Line A is 10 cm. 12.5 ℓ of water is poured into the top cube into the cuboid.
  1. What is the height of the water level from the base of the container?
  2. How much more water in cm3 must be poured in so that the water fills up half of the top cube?
5 m
Level 3
A barrel can hold 96 ℓ of water. A tank can hold 12 more litres of water than the barrel. An aquarium can hold 3 times as much water as the tank. If the aquarium is 34 filled with water, how much more water is needed to fill the aquarium completely?
4 m