It would take more millilitres.
its simply 512/ 0.5 which equals 1024
# Fill the 5 liter bucket # Pour it into the 7 liter bucket # Fill the 5 liter bucket # Fill the 7 liter bucket from the 5 (2 liters go in leaving 3 liters in the 5 liter bucket) # Empty the 7 liter bucket # Pour the 3 liters from the 5 liter bucket into the 7 liter bucket # Fill the 5 liter bucket # Fill the 7 liter bucket from the 5 liter bucket (4 liters go in leaving 1 liter in the 5 liter bucket) # Empty the 7 liter bucket # Pour the 1 liter form the 5 liter bucket into the 7 liter bucket # fill the 5 liter bucket. You now have 5 liters in the 5 liter bucket and 1 liter in the 7 liter bucket; 6 liters in all. Pour the 5 liters into the 7 liter bucket if you want all 6 liters in one container.
You could fill the 7-liter bucket and pour water into the aquarium until it is full, but that would make too much sense. If you really need to have three liters, fill the 7-liter bucket (which, although unmarked, will be larger than the 4-liter bucket) and pour it into the 4-liter bucket. When the 4-liter bucket is full, there will be three liters remaining in the 7-liter bucket.
well it will be liters because ml will be to fill the tub
Fill the 7lt bucket and use this to fill the 3lt bucket leaving 4 lts in the 7lt bucket. Empty the 3lt bucket and then 1/3rd fill again This will leave 2lts in the 7lt bucket.
Fill the 3 liter bucket, then dump it into the 7 liter bucket. Do it again, so that now you have 6 liters in the 7 liter bucket. Then fill the 3 liter bucket, and pour it into the 7 liter bucket so that you have exactly 7 liters in the 7 liter bucket. You should have 2 liters left in the 3 liter bucket................if all that made sense :P
This method works with any such problem, as long as the two buckets' liter-capacities (or gallon capacities, etc.) have no common factors, or else the common factors are also factors of the amount you're trying to measure. Fill the 7-liter bucket, and empty 5 liters of it into the 5-liter bucket; then dump out the 5 liters. Two liters will remain in the 7-liter bucket; transfer them to the 5-liter bucket. Fill the 7-liter bucket again, and empty enough of the bucket into the 5-liter bucket to fill it. That should only be 3 liters transfered, leaving 4 liters left in the 7-liter bucket. QED.
80 liters will fill a good sized fish tank [about 21 gal]. 80 milliliters would hardly start, as that is about 5 tablespoons.
It would take about 208.197 liters to fill a 55-US gallon tank with liquid.
volume
Liters, since a kitchen sink would hold at least 1 liter or 1000 milliliters.
fill a jug with water right to the top. put the jug in a bucket. put the clover in the water and let some of the water spill out. then measure how much water fell out of the jug by dumping the water that is now in the bucket into a measuring bowl. look at how many milliliters that have spilled out. say you have twenty of them, you would just change the milliliters to cm cubed so it would be(for example) 20cm cubed. fill a jug with water right to the top. put the jug in a bucket. put the clover in the water and let some of the water spill out. then measure how much water fell out of the jug by dumping the water that is now in the bucket into a measuring bowl. look at how many milliliters that have spilled out. say you have twenty of them, you would just change the milliliters to cm cubed so it would be(for example) 20cm cubed. fill a jug with water right to the top. put the jug in a bucket. put the clover in the water and let some of the water spill out. then measure how much water fell out of the jug by dumping the water that is now in the bucket into a measuring bowl. look at how many milliliters that have spilled out. say you have twenty of them, you would just change the milliliters to cm cubed so it would be(for example) 20cm cubed.