To convert from miles per gallon to feet per fluid ounce, you need to know that 1 mile is approximately 5,280 feet and 1 US fluid gallon is about 128 US fluid ounces. So, 32 miles per gallon is equivalent to (32 * 5280) feet per (1 * 128) fluid ounce, which simplifies to 1680 feet per fluid ounce.
it can go 3 feet. 10 feet if its a full ounce.
The American gallon was in use long before there were oil companies- it was the British Wine gallon. In 1884 the British changed to the Ale gallon- different size. By then the US was a separate nation, which kept their own standard gallon.
no one specific number: the imperial gallon is the volume of 10 lbs of water the pound is 16 ounces and 7000 grains the foot is 12 inches, the yard is 3 feet the acre is 43 560 sq. feet, or 160 sq. rods, or 10 chains the fifth is 2 lbs of water the quart is 1/4 gallon the ounce is 1/16 pound and 1 ounce of water the fluid ounce is 1/20 pint and the volume of 1 ounce (weight ) of water the bushel is 8 gallons the shipping ton is 42 cubic feet the register ton is 100 cu. ft.
The total square feet of the hallway is 630 square feet. If it takes 1/2 ounce per square foot, dividing by 2 gives you 315 fluid ounces.
I think that should be changed to gallons per feet.
128 Fluid Ounces make one US (Imperial) Gallon. It is important to note that "ounce" can also refer to a unit of measure for mass, and in some cases you may need to specify which you are referring to.
1 US fluid gallon = 231 cubic inches1 cubic foot = 1,728 cubic inches1 US fluid gallon = 231/1,728 = 0.133681 cubic foot (rounded)
0.2 gallon or 25.6 fluid ounces.
There are 0.668 cubic feet in a 5 gallon bucket and 7.352 cubic feet in a 55 gallon drum.
I have one - They are rated by feet per gal.
Imperial system (British) The system in Th U.S.A. isn't exactly the Imperial system, although it uses the same names. A pint in the U.S.A. is 16 fluid ounces, an imperial pint is 20 fluid ounces. Also a U.S. fluid ounce is bigger than an imperial fluid ounce (29.57 millilitres in the U.S. 28.41 ml in imperial). Inches (and by extension feet, yards and miles) in the U.S. were slightly longer than imperial inches up until 1959 when both systems redefined their measures in terms of metric standards.