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It is a physical change.
You can make a soda bottle rocket.
A six ounce bottled Coke (there weren't any larger colas at that time) cost six cents plus two cents for the bottle deposit. They washed and sterilized the bottles and refilled them at the Coca-Cola plant.
small bottle - 8 cents large bottle - 12 cents (this included 2cent bottle deposit) 'large' was 10-12 fl. oz. depending on soda brand (mid-fifties - Canada)
The difference between the taste of can soda and bottle soda is in my opinion a can soda has less aside then a bottle soda. In a can soda you taste more aside then in a bottle of soda. A bottle of soda only taste good at when you begin to drink it and if you leave it for an hour later the taste goes away and the soda taste sweet. In a can soda you could leave it in a fridge for an hour and when you finish drinking it taste the same.
err, yes, because: bottle mass + soda mass > bottle mass
well yes it is because the can is lighter than the soda. But understand that as you put the soda i the can /bottle it does get heavier. But more soda can fit in the bottle than the can so that makes the soda bottle heavier than the soda can.
1 euro 50 cent
These bottles are very collectable to soda bottle collectors. If the bottle is in mint to near mint condition then the bottle is worth about $125. matt_dempsey@hotmail.com
A bottle of soda was a dime (10 cents).
No bottled soda has more suger