A couple of points, probably just to confuse. The European way of measuring tank volume is to measure how much water the tank will hold, whereas the American way is to measure how much air at standard conditions can be compressed into it. If you know this "volume" measurement for a European tank you know all you need to know to use that tank, but with the American system you also need to know at what pressure it was deemed to hold its stated volume of gas. The units used (litres, cu.ft., gallons, bar, psi etc) have nothing to do with it. What matters is just WHAT you are measuring.
I find the American system a constant nightmare when I have to know exactly how much air a given tank holds, essential for any form of technical diving. And it's not as simple as has been stated above - I have owned some 300 tanks and I can tell you that even amongst aluminum 80's the rated pressure varies amongst manufacturers - you can't say that a nominal 80 actually holds 77.something.