There are many factors which affect fuel mileage other than just the speed you are driving. There is the type of car, terrain, road condition, whether you run the air conditioner, and many more.
But for argument's sake, if your car is rated at 30 mpg highway, then that's a pretty good starting place. So if the car can go 30 miles on 1 gallon, then it will need 1/30 gallon to go 1 mile. So if gas is $3.60 per gallon, then that'd be about $0.12 worth.
200 litres
That would depend on how much gas the car used per mile.
About 3 gallons of gas are used in driving 55 miles.
The amount of gas used depends on the the miles per gallon on the car you are driving
One kilometer is equal to approximately 0.62137 miles. Similarly, there are 1.6093 kilometers in one mile. The kilometer is metric unit used for length, and the mile is the unit of length used in the Imperial system.
There are exactly 1.609344Km to 1 mile. Normally the approximation of 1.6km = (8/5)km = 1 mile is used.
For long distances, kilometers are used. A kilometer is about 0.6 miles.
There are 1.150779448863636 miles in 1 nautical mile.
Depends on the miles per gallon the vehicle you are driving gets. Divide the mileage the vehicles gets into 2,000 and then multiply by $3. Example of a car getting 30 mpg. 30 divided into 2,000 = 66.66 gallons of fuel used for the 2,000 mile trip. At $3 per gallon, $3x66.6 gallons of fuel used = $199.80
No direct comparison is possible. A mile is a measurement of length and an odometer is a device used to measure how many miles you have traveled.
None, if you are driving a petrol car! Fuel consumption depends on a number of factors including the efficiency of your engine and your driving style.
A nautical mile or sea mile is a unit of length. It corresponds approximately to one minute of latitude along any meridian. It is a non-SI unit used especially by navigators in the shipping and aviation industries. It is 1,852 meters or about 6,076 feet.