kg is a measure of weight; liter is a measure of volume
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No. Oil is less dense than water, so 1 liter of oil will weigh less than 1 liter of water.
That depends on the specific weight of that special oil. Only for pure water one can say: 1 litre of water weighs 1 kilogram. Not oil.
The density of jatropha oil as a biodiesel fuel is 0.92 grams per cubic centimeter. Therefore, one liter will mass 920 grams or 0.92 kilograms.
A liter is a unit of volume not weight, therefore to determine how much a liter weighs it depends on what you're measuring. A liter of water has a different weight than a liter of sand and so on.
1 litre of furnace oil will have a mass of 0.998 kg. The temperature of the oil is irrelevant.
To press peanut oil, there are several steps you need to follow. 1. de-shell peanuts 2. remove the peel of the peanut kernel 3. clean the peanut kernels to remove impurities 4. ready the oil press for peanut pressing. 5. refine the crude oil(if the oil press has an oil filter system, generally this step will be unnecessary.)
Yes, it is.
There are 1000 mL in 1 L of oil.
No, since a dekagram is a measurement of weight & a liter is a measurement of volume.
Appx. 970 Grams (Near 1 litre), or 8.09 lbs per gallon (US)