There is none. Consider a kilogram of air and a kilogram of lead. The two will have considerably different volumes.
Converting volume into weight requires density as the conversion factor. Volume x density = weight (as long as the density is given in terms of weight per unit volume).
This question is mixing units of weight, milligrams, and units of volume, fluid ounce.A milliliter is the unit of volume that corresponds to fluid ounces.Milligrams correspond to dry ounces. There is a universal conversion between volume and weight, however you must know the density of the material to perform the conversion and go from milligrams to fluid ounces. Generally this will be a multiple step process:# find the density of the material in question. # put the density into useful units. Density is often in units such as grams/cubic centimeter, for the case at hand you want it in milligrams/milliliter. # multiply the weight in milligrams by the density to yield volume in milliliters. # convert the volume in milliliters to volume in fluid ounces.See the related links for conversions between millilitersand fluid ounces or milligrams and dryounces.
Of what? There is no universal connection between weight and volume.
There is no conversion possible. Pounds measure weight, kl measure volume.
There isn't one. Kilograms is weight, miles is distance - there's no conversion between them.
Of what? There is no universal correlation between volume and weight.
Of what? There is no universal correlation between volume and weight. 24 ounces of water IS NOT the same volume as 24 ounces of sugar.
Pounds (lbs) is a unit of weight or force. Milliliters (ml) is a unit of volume. There is no conversion between the two.
Depends on the substance you are measuring - there is no standard conversion of a volume measure (teaspoons, tbl, cups etc...) to a weight measure (ounces, grams, pounds etc...). This is because, for example, 3 teaspoons of lead will weigh far more than 3 teaspoons of feathers will. This variablity of weight between the same volume of substances means there is not a standard volume to weight conversion, or a weight to volume conversion for that matter.
Converting volume into weight requires density as the conversion factor. Volume x density = weight (as long as the density is given in terms of weight per unit volume).
A liter is a measurement of volume. A ton is a measurement of weight. You cannot convert directly between the 2.
This question is mixing units of weight, milligrams, and units of volume, fluid ounce.A milliliter is the unit of volume that corresponds to fluid ounces.Milligrams correspond to dry ounces. There is a universal conversion between volume and weight, however you must know the density of the material to perform the conversion and go from milligrams to fluid ounces. Generally this will be a multiple step process:# find the density of the material in question. # put the density into useful units. Density is often in units such as grams/cubic centimeter, for the case at hand you want it in milligrams/milliliter. # multiply the weight in milligrams by the density to yield volume in milliliters. # convert the volume in milliliters to volume in fluid ounces.See the related links for conversions between millilitersand fluid ounces or milligrams and dryounces.
15 cubic feet of what? - Different substances have different densities. There is no general conversion between volume and mass (or volume and weight).
This question cannot be answered correctly... since litres is a measurement of volume - not weight !
Of what? There is no universal connection between weight and volume.
256 pounds of plain water is about 31 gallons.
Note that there is an ounce, which is a unit of weight, as well as a fluid ounce, which is a measure of volume. There is no direct correspondence between the two ounces, except under certain conditions; the conversion depends on the details of the stuff in the volume.