Using a 40:1 fuel mixture will not hurt anything. The first number is the oil so the lower that number the more oil you have. I prefer running close to the 40:1 mixture because it has more oil so lubricates better. Keep in mind however that the more oil you have to gas the more smoke you get.
Answer Oil Gas MixtureYou need to find out the ratio of gas to the oil you have. It should be on the bottle. Ex. 36:1 this means 36 parts gas to 1 part oil. You then get a separate contianer that you know the volume of and mix according to the ratio your oil asks for. If you use premium gas this mixture will last longer.
find the ratio between the two, im guessing....
Yes it is ! Some examples are... Jack asks that you donate money to charity rather than buy him a present. The Post Office asks that you wrap all parcels securely to avoid damage to the contents.
When the question asks for it to be expressed in that form. Intrinsically it does not make the slightest bit of difference.
I'm wondering what the original, or book, question actually asks, but in this case, a it is a circle larger in radius, diameter and circumference by the ratio 4:3; and in area by the ratio 16:9.
a mixture of both
The bonnet (not bonit) is the cover of a cars engine. In American English it's calls hood.If someone asks "What is under the bonnet of this car?" he wants to know something about the engine.
The third person singular for the verb to ask is asks:He asks...She asks...It asks...John asks...Jane asks...Rover asks...
So.... what is the question.
when we damage the thing and some one asks to pay for it we refuse then the best way is to protect it for others and ours convienience
That is an oddly phrased question. If you're looking for the mass to luminosity relationship, it's generally L = M^3.5. But your question asks for the mass to light ratio. I'm not sure what the "light" part is referring to. But as you are given the luminosity, and the mass, perhaps you mean the ratio between those two quantities? Then you just do some division to create a ratio...
rogat is he asks (she asks / it asks).It can also regularly mean to ask for.benedictionem rogat he asks for a blessing.