THE 2.0 IS THE DISPLACEMENT OF THE ENGINE IN LITERS AND NOT CUBIC INCHES, I.E. 5.2L=318 CUBIC INCHES, 5.9L=360 CUBIC ENGINES,ETC., ETC. THE BIGGER THE NUMBER IN LITERS OR CUBIC INCHES, THE BIGGER THE ENGINE. THE 2.0 IS PROBABLY AN IN-LINE 4 CYLINDER ENGINE, MEANING THE PISTONS ARE IN A STRAIGHT LINE AND NOT SIDE BY SIDE LIKE IN A V-6 OR V-8 ENGINE,
There is no one answer to your question. It depends on how many miles a car can drive on a single gallon of gas (MPG), or in this case, on a single liter. For example, if a car can drive 20 miles on one liter, the answer is 20. If it can drive 35 miles on one liter, the answer is 35, and so on.
there a 1.6 liter and a 2.0 liter. The 1.6 liter is the GA16DE (Naturally Aspirated) & GA16DET (Turbo version) The 20. liter is the SR20DE (Naturally Aspirated) & SR20DET (Turbo version)
Unless your car is about 20-30 years old it will not have points.
20 fluid ounces is equal to 0.591470594 Liter.
Approximately 208 20-cent coins would fit in a liter, based on the volume of a standard 20-cent coin and the volume of a liter.
No. The 20 ounce bottle is just a tiny bit short of 0.6 liters.
20
5/6 liter + 20/4 liter = 5.833 liters.
20 mpg is equal to about 8.502 km per liter.
1 liter = 1,000 milliliters 20 milliliters can fit into the liter 50 times, but the liter cannot fit into the 20 milliliters even one time. If you're allowed to cut up the liter into pieces, then 1/50 of it can fit into the 20 milliliters one time. That would leave 980 milliliters hanging out.
1910 Vauxhall 3 liter 20 h.p. and the Austro-Daimler designed by Ferdinand Porsche are considered the first sports cars.1910 Vauxhall 3 liter 20 h.p. and the Austro-Daimler designed by Ferdinand Porsche are considered the first sports cars.
Ah, what a lovely question. To find 20% of one liter, you simply multiply one liter by 0.20 (which is the decimal form of 20%). This gives you 0.20 liters, which is equal to 20% of one liter. Just a gentle reminder, mistakes are just happy accidents in the world of math.