Take a sample of the water to a pool shop and they will be able to tell you what you will need.
Depends greatly on the chemical: a gallon of helium or hydrogen will have negative weight, while a gallon of lead would be too heavy to lift.
The ratio is 1:6 chemicals to water, so for half a gallon of water, you use 1/12 a gallon of chemicals
You must work out the fraction (size of your pool)/(size of pool on the chemical container) if it is given. If your pool is 2,600 galls and the amount of chemical is given for a 10,000 gall pool, you need 2600/10000 of the amount, ie 26/100, so for every 100 grams recommended, put in 26.
I think the correct answer is 4800 mils in a gallon.
3.2 ounces of chemical solution
one gallon would give $65.70 if they are stacked the correct way
This is a request for more precise amounts in a recipe.
The ratio is "one to 99", or "one part per hundred", regardless of the size of the sample. If you only want to prepare one gallon of mixture, you add (1% of one gallon) of chemical to (99% of 1 gallon) of water. 1 gallon = 128 fluid ounces Chemical = 0.01 x 128 = 1.28 fluid ounce Water = 0.99 x 128 = 126.72 fluid ounces Together, you have (1.28 + 126.72) = 128 fluid ounces = 1 gallon.
There are 4 pints in a Gallon The correct answer is 4 quarts to a gallon.
Yes. that is correct.
A quart is a quarter of a gallon so 3 quarters of a spoonful is the answer.
Yes