fill it until it is at 30 gallons...isn't it obvious
To fill the 30-gallon tank, you would need to use the pesticide and water in a ratio of 4 ounces to 1 gallon. Therefore, you would need 120 ounces (30 gallons x 4 ounces) of pesticide to fill the 30-gallon tank.
get a 1 or 5 gallon water jugs and fill it up keep track and that's how i did it with my 30 gallon
my 1976 dodge d100 has a 30 gallon tank.
30. You just said it's a 30 gallon tank.
I need to know the year. I have a 1998 Nissan Sentra GXE and it has a 1.6 engine in it. It currently drives at about 29 - 31 MPG and it has a 12 gallon tank. Therefore the following formulas should help you. (12 gallon tank) x (30 mpg) = 360 miles or (price of gas) x (12 Gallons) = ($ to fill up 12 gallon tank)
leopard geckos would love it in a 20 gallon tank, i have had a few and they get about 12 inches or so long and a 20-30 gallon tank is perfect for them
Assuming you go all the way to empty each time, you would need to fill up 1.3 times.
30 gallon
A 30 gallon tank is alright for a blood python baby, for now. Once the blood python begins to grow it will out grow the tank.
Depends on the size of the tank and the miles per gallon that vehicle gets. I have a truck that will travel 15 miles on one gallon, and a sedan that will travel 30 on the same gallon. I have one truck with a 10 gallon tank, another with a 20 gallon tank.
150g
The equation ( T = 30p ) represents the total cost ( T ) of filling Owen's truck's gas tank, where ( p ) is the price per gallon of gasoline. This means that if the price per gallon increases or decreases, the total cost to fill the tank will adjust accordingly, directly proportional to the price. For example, if the price per gallon is $3, the total cost to fill the tank would be $90 (i.e., ( 30 \times 3 )).