it would equal .4 oz of oil or 12 mls.
4 ounces of oil to 1 gallon of gas.
Yes, using a gas monitor will lower your gas bill. The purpose of the monitor is to allow you to see how much you are using, and therefore, how much you can conserve.
CGR, or Condensate Gas ratio, is the ratio of condensate liquid volume divided by dry gas volume. The field unit is bbl/MMscf. The inverse of CGR is GOR (Gas Oil ratio), although solution GOR is the amount of gas dissolved in 1 bbl of oil, while CGR is an indicator of how much condensate will drop out of 1 MMscf of gas.
If not using oil injection, the 115 hp Yamaha outboard will require a 50:1 ratio.
It takes 4 onces of oil to one gallon of gas to make a 32 to 1 ratio. It takes 4 onces of oil to one gallon of gas to make a 32 to 1 ratio.
1part by volume of oil to 40 parts by volume of gas.
the ratio is 999 degress nort
4.27 ounces.
8 ounces
There is a very simple solution to find your ratios. There are 128 ounces in a gallon and since we are always using a ratio of 1 for the gas all you need to do is divide 128 by the gas side of the ratio. The standard ratio seems to be 40 to 1 (40 : 1) gas to oil in which case we divide 128 by 40 and get 3.2. This means you need 3.2 ounces of oil for every gallon of gas. (128 / 40 = 3.2) I am confused as to whether you are asking for a 125 to 1 ratio or are confused and mean a 1 to 25 ratio. Here are a few values for gas mixing. 125 : 1 ratio is 1.024 ounces per gallon of gas 25 : 1 ratio is 5.12 ounces per gallon of gas 50 : 1 ratio is 2.56 ounces per gallon of gas 40 : 1 ratio is 3.20 ounces per gallon of gas
0.4 gallons
the ratio of the volume of gas passing to waste, to the volume of gas passing down the capillary column, is call split ratio.