First off, the density you're meaning must be .70 g/mL.
Multiply that by 1000 to get grams per liter (700), then multiply that by the volume (49.2 L).
34440g or 34.44kg or 75.93 pounds.
No, it is measured by gallons.
Contrary to popular belief, dinosaurs did not drink gasoline for energy. They ate meat and plants, depending on the dinosaur. They also drank water.
mass = density * volume density = 0.7 g/mL = 700 g/L volume = 50 L mass = 700 g/L * 50 L = 35,000 g = 35kg
At Ease - 1983 A Tankful of Dollars 1-1 was released on: USA: 4 March 1983
There is no such word. If you mean thankful, there is no plural.
A Full tankful.
A tankful.
George Shrinks - 2000 Tankful of Trouble 2-8 was released on: USA: 27 October 2001
Bad gasoline will cause the 460 motor in my 1982 E350 to vapor lock on a hot day. I don't buy gas at super cheap off-brand stations to avoid this but once in a while I will get tankful that makes the van run terribly and sometimes vapor lock. Adding octane booster or Heet water remover to the gas usually helps to burn more smoothly through the bad tankful.
At present, about $35 - $40 per tankful.
To heat up a tankful of cold water will take about an hour initially. Once it's hot, the heaters will automatically come on when temperature drops a bit .
Greyhound buses don't run on gasoline. There's a small riveted plate on the panel to the driver's left or next to the starter button that says "Diesel #1 recommended. Diesel #2 acceptable." Range on a tankful is always changing due to improvements in a number of things, the least of which being electronic engine controls. However, a good rule of thumb from the days of the MCI/TMC MC-9 (182 gallon capacity with 179 gallons usable) is 750 miles, assuming a full tank, but nowadays, 800-900 miles and farther is not unheard of.