5 because there are four quarts in a gallon plus one equals 5
4
The weight of 1.0 US gallon depends upon the identity of the substance and temperature. The weight of 1.0 U.S. gallon of pure water at 60 F is 8.338 lbf or 37.04 N.
On Earth, 1 newton is nearly 0,102 kilogram. 110 N = 11.22 kg.
N 8-oz cups = ( V gal ) ( 4 qt / gal ) ( 2 pint / qt ) ( 2 cups / pint ) N 8-oz cups = ( V gal ) ( 16 8-oz cups / gal ) N 8-oz cups = ( 9 gal ) ( 16 8-oz cups / gal ) N 8-0z cups = 144 8-oz cups <---------
Any number of the form 2*n+1 where n is an integer.
1,000,000,000 milli litres = 1 mega litre Solution Method 1: -------------------- n milli litres = 1 mega litres n 1/1,000 litres = 1,000,000 llitres n = 1,000,000 litres / (1/1000) liters n = 1,000,000 / .001 or 1,000,000 * 1,000 n = 1,000,000,000 milli litres Solution Method 2: -------------------- 1 litre = 1,000 milli litres 1 mega litre = 1,000,000 litres 1,000,000 litres * (1,000 milli litres / 1 litre) = 1,000,000,000 milli litres
4 quarts = 1 gallon = 8 pints
1 gallon = 4 quarts 50 gallons = 50 x 4 = 200 quarts
1 gallon = 8 pints 1 pint = 0.125 gallon ( 1/8 ) 1 gallon = 4 quarts 2 pints = 1 quart 1 pint = 2 cups = 16 ounces N gallons = ( N pints ) ( 1 gallon / 8 pints ) N gallons = ( N cups ) ( 1 gallon / 16 cups ) N gallons = ( N ounces ) ( 1 gallon / 128 ounces )
1 Imperial gallon equates to 4.54609 litres.
1 pint = 0.5 quart 1 pint / 0.5 quart = 14 pints / N Using MPE, we have N = 7 quarts.
There are eight pints in one gallon
N pints = ( N quarts ) ( 2 pints / quart )N pints = ( 7 quarts ) ( 2 pints/quart ) = 14 pints
About 7.56 500mL bottles per gallon.
It is impossible to measure out exactly 1 gallon into a 4 gallon container, unless the container has appropriate markings for measurement. However, if you had a 2nd container available, it may be possible to derive a 1 gallon measurement. Assuming a 2nd container of size: 1 Gallon: Just use the 2nd container 2 Gallon: Impossible 3 Gallon: Fill the 4 gallon container completely, then pour it into the 3 gallon container until full. You should have exactly 1 gallon left in the 4 gallon container. 4 Gallon: Impossible 5 Gallon: Fill the 5 gallon container until it is full, then dump it's contents into the 4 gallon container, leaving exactly 1 gallon left in the 5 gallon container. 6 Gallon: Impossible 7 Gallon: Fill the 4 gallon container completely, then empty it's contents into the 7 gallon container. Repeat this process, and when the 7 gallon container is full, there should be exactly 1 gallon left in the 4 gallon container. 8 Gallon: Impossible 9 Gallon: Fill the 9 gallon container completely, then use it to fill the 4 gallon container. Once the 4 gallon container is full, empty it and repeat. After pouring from the 9 gallon container twice, you will end up with exactly 1 gallon left. 10 Gallon: Impossible This pattern repeats for all containers that satisfy the following equations: C*n+1 C*n-1 Where C is the size of the original container (4 in this case), and n is all whole numbers greater than 0. The only additional case would be a 2nd container size of 1.
The weight of 1.0 US gallon depends upon the identity of the substance and temperature. The weight of 1.0 U.S. gallon of pure water at 60 F is 8.338 lbf or 37.04 N.
3.56 pounds of N/gal of 32%
Unfortunately your question cannot be answered without an additional measurement. A gallon is actually a volume of liquid. The measurement you gave is an area related measurement.n feet x n feet x n feet = n feet³ or volumen feet x n feet = n feet² or area