Yes you can but you might to have to cut the driveshaft or get a shorter one just did it this week.
Mine has a metric over drive transmission since you asked.
The basic metric unit for electrical power measurement is the watt, which is equal to one joule per second.
It's a metric 200R4
without moisture
SI, the current version of the metric system, uses 7 base units:meter, for lengthkilogram, for masssecond, for timeampere, for electrical currentmole, for amount of substancekelvin, for temperaturecandela, for luminositySI, the current version of the metric system, uses 7 base units:meter, for lengthkilogram, for masssecond, for timeampere, for electrical currentmole, for amount of substancekelvin, for temperaturecandela, for luminositySI, the current version of the metric system, uses 7 base units:meter, for lengthkilogram, for masssecond, for timeampere, for electrical currentmole, for amount of substancekelvin, for temperaturecandela, for luminositySI, the current version of the metric system, uses 7 base units:meter, for lengthkilogram, for masssecond, for timeampere, for electrical currentmole, for amount of substancekelvin, for temperaturecandela, for luminosity
19mm
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.
no a v-8 will not adapt to a 2.8 transmission...due to a metric size... but a 4.3 transmission will bolt up to any chevy v-8
According to the owners manual, vehicles with a manual transmission require 9.7 metric litres. If you have air conditioning, 9.5 metric litres.
0.138 what? Without knowing the units of the 0.138 (I assume in some imperial measurement) it can't be converted to metric.
metric 200 I think.
Most metric motorcycles do not have separate engine and transmission fluids. The engine oil also lubricates the transmission.When in doubt, check the owner's manual.