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you would have 2.857 LITERS.
yes, because it can fill a container like a liquid. One mole of a gas at STP is 2.24 Liters
On a car, 40 liters.
at the same temperature that 2 liters would. In fact it's depends on the kind of gasoline you're talkin' about.
1 Imperial gallon = 4.54609188 liters so you would ask for 45.46 liters.
Yes, I definitely would. Replace the hydraulic oil not the container. The container is fine, just flush it and the hydraulic system out clean.
Yes, a 60000cm³ container can hold 50 liters of water. 1 liter is equal to 1000cm³, so 50 liters would be 50,000cm³. Since 50,000cm³ is less than 60,000cm³, the container can hold 50 liters of water.
if the two were in a container, the oil would raise to the top. if that helps any
It depends on the type of gasoline, and other factors such as temperature and pressure, but gasoline has an approximate density of 737.22 kilogram/cubic meter. 737.22 kilogram/cubic meter = 0.73722 kilogram/liter = 737.22 gram/liter 42.4 liters * 0.73722 kilograms/liter = 31.258 kilograms or since you wanted grams, not kilograms... 42.4 liters * 737.22 gram/liter = 31258 grams(http://forum.onlineconversion.com/showthread.php?t=1114)
As illustrated in the 1995 movie Die Hard 3 (Bruce Willis, Samuel K. Jackson), you can measure out exactly 7 liters in the following manner:Fill the 5 liter container, then use that 5 liters to fill the 3 liter container.Dump out the 3 liter container.What was left in the 5 gallon container is 2 liters. Pour this into the 3 liter container.Fill the 5 liter container again.You now have 7 liters : 5 in the large container and 2 in the smaller one.
20 liters = 20,000 cc.Regardless of what's in it.Even if it's empty.
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