None, since there can be no conversion.
A pound is a measure of mass. A litre is a measure of volume. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
If you are not convinced, consider a litre of air. How many pounds? Next consider the same volume of lead. How many kilograms?
The masses of equal volumes of the two substances will clearly be very different. So there is no direct conversion between mass and volume: you need to know the density of the substance to enable you to carry out the conversion.
A liter measures volume where a pound is a measure of weight. You would need the density of whatever you wanted to convert to figure this out.
1 kiloliter is equal to 1000 liters.
The two are incompatible; a litre is a current volume measurement and a pound is an obsolete mass measurement.
3.7 liters = 3700 ml
123 deciliters equal 12.3 liters, as 1 liter is equal to 10 deciliters.
There are many liters that can make up a pound. This really just depends on what the liters consist of.
A liter measures volume where a pound is a measure of weight. You would need the density of whatever you wanted to convert to figure this out.
1 kiloliter is equal to 1000 liters.
Liters can't be converted to pounds. Liters measure volume, while pounds measure mass.
218
The two are incompatible; a litre is a current volume measurement and a pound is an obsolete mass measurement.
1258cm3 is 1.258 liters.
212 pints equal to 100 liters
500 millimeters equal 2 liters
3.7 liters = 3700 ml
123 deciliters equal 12.3 liters, as 1 liter is equal to 10 deciliters.
1.2 liters