I think it is cubic centimeters (200cc = 1cup) because of these examples i have found: 2 cups (400 cc) white sugar, and this one: 4 cups minus 2 tbsp (775 cc). So 300cc of water is 1 and 1/2 cups.
The weight of 300 cc (cubic centimeters) of a substance depends on its density. For example, 300 cc of water weighs approximately 300 grams, since the density of water is about 1 gram per cc. However, for other substances, the weight will vary according to their specific densities. To find the weight, you can multiply the volume (in cc) by the substance's density (in grams per cc).
300 Cubic Centimeters = 0.07925161579118878 Gallons
1cc=1ml 28.4 cc (ml)=1oz 284 cc (ml)=10 oz (that's close) 300cc (ml)=10.144 oz
That is 5 cc
1 in = 2.54 cm 1 cu in = 1 in × 1 in × 1 in = 2.54 cm × 2.54 cm × 2.54 cm = 16.387064 cc → 300 cu in = 300 × 16.387064 cc = 4916.1192 cc ≈ 4916 cc
300 cc (cubic centimeters) is equivalent to 300 milliliters (ml), as 1 cc is equal to 1 ml. In terms of liters, 300 cc is 0.3 liters. This measurement is commonly used in cooking, medicine, and various scientific applications to quantify volume.
For every 1 ml of anything, there is 1 cc of it. That means 300 ml of something will equal 300 cc of that substance. Both ml and cc are measures of volume, and they're measures of identical volumes.
a "cc" is a "centimetre cube". 1 cc of water = 1mL 1 cc of oil = 0.9mL 100 cc of oil = 90mL
3 mL - A cc (cubic centimeter) and a mL (milliliter) are the same measure of volume.
300 cc is a measure of volume. A pound is a measure of mass. The two measure different things and it is meaningless to even try to convert one to the other. Just consider 300 cc of air and a 300 cc block of lead. It should be obvious to anybody that the two will have very different masses.
Ten ounces equals 300 cc.
One cc unit is equal to 1 milliliter of water.