Formula: tons x 0.8928571 = long tons
1 tons / 1000 = kg
Use this formula: mpg x 0.425 = km per liter
According to fueleconomy.gov http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/noframes/4632.shtml Fuel Type = Regular MPG (city) = 15 MPG (highway) = 22 MPG (combined) = 18 Fuel to Drive 25 Miles = 1.39 gal Based on 15000 annual miles and a fuel price of 3.01 per gallon: Cost to Drive 25 Miles = $4.18 Annual Fuel Cost = $2510 Annual Greenhouse Gas Emissions = 10.20 tons Best of all vehicles = 3.5 tons Worst of all vehicles = 16.2 tons I own (and drive) an '88 SDV. My mileage is 10-20% higher. I attribute this to very careful driving. Moby (my Great White Caddy) has an on-board computer that lets me monitor fuel consumption: instantaneous mpg, average mpg, and projected driving range based on available fuel and average mpg. It's amazing how conscious of driving one can be when given good information.
The conversion formula is: UK (long) tons x 1.12 = US (short) tons.
Formula: short tons x 907,200 = grams
Formula: metric tons x 2,204.6 = pounds
Very roughly 2.2 mpg based on specified fuel burn and cruse speed
165.19 kg = 0.1821 US tons (formula: kg x 0.001102 = US tons)
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.
The mpg for the cheby cobalt ranges from 24-26 mpg city and 34-37 mpg highway driving, depending on the transmission. Keep in mind that this is based on ideal car conditions and will be lower it the car is not maintained properly.
It is the inverse of mpg or 1/mpg. This is due to the nature of the units involved: mi/gal is the same as 1/gal/mi.So if your car gets 20 mpg, it burns 1/20 gallons/mile or .05 gal/mi