Convert barrel (US)/day [bbl (US)/d] to acre-foot/hour [ac*ft/h] Online | Free flow Converter
/Day [bbl (US)/d]
Barrel per day (US) [bbl (US)/d] is a unit of volumetric flow rate widely used in the oil and gas industry to measure the daily production, transport, or consumption of crude oil and petroleum products. One US barrel equals approximately 159 liters, so bbl (US)/d quantifies how many barrels of oil flow or are produced each day. This unit is commonly used by oil companies, refineries, and energy analysts to monitor production rates, assess pipeline capacities, and plan storage and distribution. For example, an oil well producing 10,000 bbl (US)/d delivers 10,000 barrels of crude oil per day, allowing planners to estimate revenue, manage supply chains, and schedule transportation. It is also used to compare output across fields, track consumption trends, and optimize refinery operations. Compared to smaller units like barrels per hour, bbl (US)/d provides a long-term perspective, making it suitable for strategic planning, reporting, and operational analysis in the petroleum sector. Using barrel per day allows professionals to monitor, manage, and optimize oil production and flow, ensuring efficiency, safety, and effective resource allocation in large-scale energy operations.
Hour [ac·ft/h]
Acre-foot per hour [ac·ft/h] is a unit of volumetric flow rate commonly used in hydrology, irrigation, and water resource engineering. One acre-foot represents the volume of water needed to cover one acre of land to a depth of one foot, approximately 1,233 cubic meters or 325,851 gallons. When expressed per hour, ac·ft/h measures the water volume delivered, consumed, or flowing through a system within a single hour. This unit is particularly useful for managing high-capacity water distribution systems, including canals, reservoirs, and municipal or industrial supply networks, where monitoring short-term flow is essential. For example, a hydroelectric dam releasing 10 ac·ft/h discharges enough water to cover ten acres to a depth of one foot every hour, assisting operators in controlling water levels and power generation. It is also applied in flood control, irrigation scheduling, and industrial water use where precise flow rates are critical. Compared to ac·ft/d or ac·ft/y, acre-foot per hour provides finer temporal resolution, allowing for rapid adjustments and better system management. Using ac·ft/h enables engineers and water managers to monitor, regulate, and optimize water flow, ensuring efficiency, safety, and sustainability in diverse water resource applications.
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