Fill the 11 court pail four times using the 3 quart pail. When the 11 quart pail is full, there will be one quart left in the smaller pail. You empty the large pail and pour the quart into it. You fill the larger one up four times again, only on the last fill there will be two quarts left in the pail.
A pound is a unit of mass. A quart is a unit of capacity. Without some unit of density to compare, the two units are incompatible.
Mixing things in 'parts' is using a ratio when mixing different things together. It depends upon what you are mixing with it. If you are mixing bleach to water at a ratio of 1 part bleach to 3 parts water, you would add a cup of bleach and three cups of water to equal one quart.
I personally Dont rememeber because i havent done it in mine in a while (need too).... but my Rancher 400 At i think was about a quart? i think so but Consult a owners manual or call a local Honda powersports dealer and they will let you know.
According to my calculations and the old saying "a pint's a pound the world round" then a quart of cherries would weigh more than a pound of cherries. One pint of cherries would weigh 16 ounces and there are 2 pints in a quart. So one quart of cherries would weigh 32 ounces or 2 pounds. Whereas a pound of cherries weighs 16 ounces. Therefore a quart of cherries is double the weight of a pound of cherries.
Start with five quarts and then check the dipstick. Add a quarter quart at a time til the dipstick reads full. Seems to me that if you have to be told this you should be taking your jeep to the instant oil change place and letting the high school dumbasses do your oil change. Just my opinion of course.......
Fill the 7 quart pail. Now pour as much of the seven quarts as possible into the four quart pail. What you have left in the 7 quart pail is 3 quarts. Pour that three quarts into a third container. Now repeat the process to get another 3 quarts. The total of getting 3 quarts two times is 6 quarts.
you can measure any liquid in quarts.
A quart is a measure of liquid.
An Imperial quart is a measure of volume equal to about 1.2 US quarts.
19 quarts more.
Fill the 5-quart pail, then pour the liquid into the 3-quart pail until it is full.This will leave 2 quarts in your 5-quart pail. Empty the 3-quart pail.Pour the 2 quarts from your 5-quart pail into the 3-quart pail. Then fill up the 5-quart pail.Between the full 5-quart pail and the 3-quart pail (with 2 quarts in it) you should now have 7 quarts!
0.5 qt 1 quart = 32 oz 1 oz = 0.03 qt 1 Imp. qt = 40 oz
Milligrams are a measure of weight, quart a measure of volume. This depends on the density of the substance.
None. Yards measure distance and quarts measure volume.
Exactly 1/2 quart
1 quart = 4 cups 5 quarts = (5 x 4) = 20 cups
Fill each container halfway and then add the 5 quart to the 7 quart. 2.5 + 3.5 = 6