Convert Acre-Foot (US Survey) (ac*ft (US)) to Dram (dr) instantly.
Acre-Foot (US Survey) to Dram conversion
1 Acre-Foot (US Survey) (ac*ft (US)) = 333673860 Dram (dr). To convert Acre-Foot (US Survey) to Dram, multiply the value by 333673860.
| Acre-Foot (US Survey) (ac*ft (US)) | Dram (dr) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 333673860 |
| 2 | 667347730 |
| 5 | 1668369300 |
| 10 | 3336738600 |
| 25 | 8341846600 |
| 50 | 16683693000 |
| 100 | 33367386000 |
| 1000 | 333673860000 |
Frequently asked questions
How many Dram are in one Acre-Foot (US Survey)?
One Acre-Foot (US Survey) (ac*ft (US)) equals 333673860 Dram (dr).
How do I convert Acre-Foot (US Survey) to Dram?
To convert Acre-Foot (US Survey) to Dram, multiply the value by 333673860.
What is 10 Acre-Foot (US Survey) in Dram?
10 Acre-Foot (US Survey) = 3336738600 Dram.
About these units
Acre-Foot (US Survey) (ac*ft (US))
The US survey acre-foot differs extremely slightly from the international acre-foot due to the slight difference between the survey foot and the international foot. While the distinction is negligible in most contexts, it is important in surveying, legal water rights, and long-term hydrological accounting, especially in regions where large historical datasets were recorded using US survey measures. This variant highlights how even subtle unit differences can have major implications when dealing with huge volumes over long timescales, such as state water budgets and inter-state compacts.
Dram (dr)
The fluid dram is a small historical unit equal to 1/8 of a US fluid ounce or 3.6967 mL (US), with slightly different imperial values. It originated in apothecaries and early pharmaceutical texts, where drams measured potent liquid medicines, tinctures, and extracts. In daily life, drams appeared in old cocktail recipes, medicinal syrups, and household remedies. However, the inconsistency between US and UK drams, along with the rise of the metric system, pushed it out of modern use. Today, the dram survives mostly in whiskey culture—where a "dram" informally means a small pour, not a precise measurement—and in historical studies of medicine.