It mainly depends upon the showerhead. The original generation of showerheads typically dispensed 3.5 to 5.0 gallons per minute (gpm) which would be between 53 and 76 liters in 4 minutes. The first generation of water-saving showerheads dispensed about 2.2 to 2.5 gpm, which would be between 33 and 38 liters in 4 minutes. In the USA, federal law requires new showerheads to have a rate of 2.5 gpm or less. The newest generation of low-flow showerheads use new engineering technology to achieve rates as low as 1.5 gpm, which would be only 23 liters in 4 minutes. You can get the amount even lower by running the water for 1 minute to get wet, turning off the water while soaping up, then turning the water back on for 2 minutes of rinsing; so a 4 minute shower would only use water for 3 minutes, a 25% water savings.
A water saving shower uses between 2 to 5 gallons of water a minute
That depends on the pipe diameter, the shower head, the water pressure and if the shower is pumped. Without all this information it is impossible to say.
It is over 9000 in a ten minute shower
532 liters
It depends on how hard your water is running. Measure the time it takes to fill a small bucket. Then you can work out the answer.About 120 litersAbout 100 to 150 litresThat depends on the time and shower head. The average shower head, at average home pressure uses about 5 litres per minuteAbout 10-12 litres per minute.
Depends what the Shower pressure is, also how much dirt is in the water and the size of the shower holes
15
It depends on both the amount of time and the type of shower head. It usually ranges from 20 to 160 liters of water for a ten minute shower. Edit: A typical shower will use about 160 liters of water. In addition, the average shower uses approximately 10.0022 liters of water per minute. (EarthCareCanada.com)
Shower, Shower heads can usually allow anywhere between 2.5 and 5 gallons of water a minute. Toilets can use this volume in a single flush. As most showers last longer than one minute the shower volume is considerably higher.
Most modern shower heads (U.S.) are restricted to 2.0 gallons a minute or less, so a ten minute shower would use approx. 20 gal.
About 1.25 gallons per minute.
Most newer shower heads restrict water flow to around 3.5 gallons a minute max. . .this would equal around 35 gallons for a 10 minute shower
There is no relationship between millilitres and a shower.You are possibly asking how much water does it take to shower, in that case- the average shower head discharges about 1.5 - 2 gallons of water per minute.
That is approximately 100 pints