1/2 tablespoon per pint--so you put 3/4 of a tablespoon in a 1 1/2 pint jar
The bottle says 9 tablespoons per gallon of water
Instructions: 1. Fill the sprayer tank with half gallon of water. 2. Add Relegate and fill the gallon with another half gallon water. 3. Apply immediately. And do not store.
It depends on where you get the water.If you have a well, the water is free.If you live in an apartment, you don't pay for the water. Correction: water is payed anywhere !The average cost for water for home use is $2 per 1000 gallons.That breaks down to 2 cents for 10 gallons.If you buy water from a store, the cost can vary widely.For example, a gallon of Great Bear mountain spring water can be bought for 89 cents in some places.
From Wikipedia:A bung is truncated cylindrical or conical closure to seal a container, such as a bottle, tube or barrel. Unlike a lid which encloses a container from the outside without displacing the inner volume a bung is partially inserted inside the container to act as a seal. The lids for safety overpacks for 55 gallon drums sometimes may have a bung built in for access of the contents of the container. These may be referred to as fuel bungs.A rubber stopper is sometimes called a rubber bung, and a cork stopper is called a cork. Sometimes bung stoppers used for wine bottles are referred to as "corks", even though made from another material.
It can be all three. First, it's a solution. They put the ingredients into water, stir till they dissolve, and they have soda. So there's your solution. Now get some salt, or some sugar, or some other powder that dissolves in water, and put it in the soda. Stir till it dissolves. Now the soda is a solvent. (Soda contains phosphoric acid, and if you put soda on rusty metal it will dissolve the rust, but that takes a while.) Next, get a gallon of water and pour a can of soda into it. Stir. The soda has dissolved into the water, and is now a solute.
That is 256 tablespoons in a US gallon..
1 gallon = 256 tablespoons
1. Fill the 2 gallon container with water. 2. Pour all the water in the 2 gallon container into the 3 gallon container. 3. Refill the 2 gallon container 4. Fill the 3 gallon container the rest of the way with the 2 gallon container. You will have 1 gallon left in the 2 gallon container without using the 5 gallon container. P.S Whose bomb are you trying to defuse?
A tablespoon is 1/2 ounce. Since there are 128 ounces in one gallon, there are 128 x 2 = 256 tablespoons in a gallon.
Use the 3gallon container to fill the 5gallon container once the 5gallon container is full you should be left with one gallon in the 3 gallon container.
Notation: ( x , y ) where x is the amount of water in the 3-gallon container and y is the amount of water in the 5-gallon container1. Fill the three-gallon container ( 3 , 0 )2. Pour the three gallons into the 5-gallon container ( 0 , 3 )3. Fill the three-gallon container ( 3 , 3 )4. Fill the five-gallon container with the three-gallon container, leaving 1 gallon in the three gallon container ( 1 , 5 )5. Pour out the water from the five-gallon container ( 1 , 0 )6. Pour the water from the three-gallon container into the five-gallon container ( 0 , 1 )7. Fill the three-gallon container ( 3 , 1 )8. Pour the water from the three-gallon container into the five-gallon container ( 0 , 4 )Another great answer here:[See below for the related link]
That is 128 tablespoons
1. Completely fill the 4 gallon container. 2. Pour 3 of the 4 gallons into the 3 gallon container, leaving 1 gallon in the 4 gallon container. 3. Empty the 3 gallon container and pour the 1 remaining gallon from the 4 gallon container into the 3 gallon container. 4. Fill the 4 gallon container. Now you have a total of 5 gallons, 4 in the 4 gallon container and 1 in the 3 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.
fill 3 gallon container with juice and poor into 5 gallon container you now have 3 gallons in he container. now refil the 3 gallon container and fill the 5 gallon the rest of the way. now you have used up 2 gallons filling the 5 gallon container and you have 1 gallon left in the 3 gallon container.
16 cups in a gallon... 48tsp in a cup... answer: 768 tsp are in one gallon. I hope that helped
A 'canister' of salt may be any size. I have seen 8, 12 and 16 ounce canisters.