Yes. Kerosene has 140,000 btu's per gallon and gasoline has less.
There is more than 4 cups in a gallon. There is 16 cups in one gallon.
three liters are more than a gallon
1 US liquid gallon is 16 cups. That's more than 15 of them.
No, 3 cups is not more than 1 gallon. There are 16 cups in 1 gallon.
No. A gallon weighs about 8 pounds, and a ton is 2,000 pounds.
Kerosene releases more energy then ethanol but it is harder to put into engines that run on gasoline already.
Not ALL gallons of milk cost more. But it may be just because of the brand of milk or gasoline.
Gasoline enriched with ethanol contains more oxygen - so it burns cleaner and much faster than regular gasoline. Which means it increase the power of your car.
It is about 3.785 times more than a liter.
as an accelerant, kerosene has a higher flash temperature than does gasoline, meaning it requires more energy to start burning. i.e. - bigger flame, or spark.
Because the fuel companys are a bunch of oportunistic crooks. the same rule aplys to diesel fuel.
One gallon equals 4 quarts. Four liters equals 4.2 quarts. Therefore, one gallon is slightly less than four liters.
There is more energy in one gallon of diesel than one gallon of gasoline. To elaborate, the word "petrol" is defined in different ways in different places..... but if you have two internal combustion engines of the same displacement the diesel will produce more power than the gasoline engine, especially in 'torque' measurement
Fractional distillation is used to separate the components of petroleum. Petrol (gasoline) evaporates at a lower temperature than kerosene evaporates at.
Quantity demanded will be more than the quantity supplied.
It is actually a fuel like kerosene or a petroleum spirit (paint thinner) more than gasoline. It is also a higher grade/quality than that used for ground transportation.
It doesn't <><><> Well, to a minor extent, it does. Warm liquids weigh less than the same volume of a cold liquid. So a gallon of ice cold gasoline would weigh slightly more than a gallon of hot gasoline. Like most things, liquids expand and contract with temperature.