3L of water = 3kg
1L = 1kg = 2.2 lb. (us)
3 kilograms
1 liter of water weighs 1.01 kilograms so 3 litres would weigh 3.03kilograms.
11/2 pounds.
3?
With couplings, 110 lbs
1000cc=1000cm^3. Density of water approximately equals to 1g/cm^3. Therefore, 1000cc of water is about 1kg.
Three million gallons of plain water would weigh 25,020,000 pounds or 12,510 tons. That much water would require a container of 401,041.68 cubic feet to hold it.
3 liters of water is 3 liters of water since the s.g of water is exactly 1. this is only so for water and for none other liquid.
3 to 4 liters of water
3 liters
1 liter of olive oil is 0.92kg so 3 liters is 2.76kg
it ranges from 3 pounds, 7 ounces to 4 pounds, 7 ounces (approx.)
The answer depends on how big the glass is and how much liquid is in it. 13 eight ounce glasses of water would equal 3.09 liters of water.
11/2 pounds.
fill the 3 litre. empty this into the 8 litre. Fill the 3 litre, empty this into the 5 litre. Fill the 3 litre, empty as much as possible into the 5 litre, but you'll have one left. when you add this 1 to the 8 litre jug that you've already got 3 litres in already, this gives you 4 litres.
It completely depends on what those liters are full of. The weight will be different for different substances. -- If they're empty, they weigh nothing. Zero, zip. -- If they're full of air, they weigh something, but not a lot. -- If they're full of water, they weigh roughly 249 pounds. -- If they're full of stones, or gold, or lead, they can easily weigh a ton or more.
30 liters of a 10 % solution of fertilizer has .1(30) = 3 liters of fertilizer 1 liter of 30% solution has .3 liter of fertilizer 10 liters of 30% solution has 3 liters of fertilizer so, the chemist needs 10 liters of the 30% solution and 20 liters of water to make 30 liters of a 10% solution.
Dual flush toilets usually use 3 and 6 liters of water depending on which way you push the flush handle - 3 liters for a little job and 6 liters for a major event. Single low-flush toilets use either 4.5 liters or 6 liters.
14-21 liters a week (2-3 liters a day*7 days in a week).