The above answer would imply that 1167.9189 litres of air would have a mass of 1 metric ton, as would 1167.9189 litres of lead. I think not.
A metric ton is a measure of mass while a litre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
There used to be an equivalence between the mass of pure water at 4 deg Celsius and a pressure of 760 mm of Mercury but that equivalence was abandonned in 1964.
That is only possible for pure water. 1000 litres of water weigh 1 metric tonne. This calculation is not right with gasoline.
To convert metric tons to net tons (or, simply, tons), multiply your metric tons by 1.1023. For example, 4 metric tons equals 4.4092 net tons.
19,500,000 tons is 17,690,000 metric tons.
10.004206
Dry metric tons are metric tons without moisture. 100 metric tons at 10% moisture = 90 dry metric tons. The formula is metric tons equals dry metric tons less moisture.
you take all the metric tons...and out them over there ----->
Formula: metric tons x 2,204.6 = pounds
1 pound is 0.000453592 metric tons. 1 metric ton is 2204.62262 pounds
The conversion factor between metric tons (t) and kilograms (kg) is 1,000. This means that 1 metric ton is equal to 1,000 kilograms. To convert from metric tons to kilograms, you multiply the weight in metric tons by 1,000. To convert from kilograms to metric tons, you divide the weight in kilograms by 1,000.
kg x 0.001 = metric tons
Liter is a unit of volume equal to 0.001 cubic meters. Metric ton (tonne) is a unit of mass, equal to 1000 kilograms. The only time you can find mass from volume, is if you have a specific substance of known density. For example, water has a density of 1 kg/liter =0.001 (metric ton / liter), so if you had 500 liters of water, then: 500 L * 0.001 (metric ton/L) = 0.5 metric tons
1100 MT convert to 440 bundle
7,000 kg = about 6.889 metric tons.