1 US quart = 0.25 US gallons
2048 US quarts = 512 US gallons
The blood throughput of the heart may be "thousands of gallons" a day but it re-pumps the same blood over and over again. The blood throughput of the heart is about 5 L/min (7 m3/d) which amounts to about 2,000 gallons (US) a day. The human body contains about 5 quarts of blood.
Three.
This depends on the substance. Re-ask the question with the substance or density of the substance. Gallons -> volume Lbs -> weight Weight = volume X density
A barrel of fresh water is 31.5 gallons in most states.
It holds a total of 9 quarts. I know, because mine is going into the shop for a re-build. At 174,000+ miles, it has held up very well.
The answer depends on what engine you are talking about. Varies from engine to engine.
Fill your tank, calculate the miles to the next service station, and see how many gallons you need to re-fill the tank.
fill up your tank, , keep track of how many gallons it took to fill up, re-set you trip ometer, then drive your car until the gas light come on, take total miles traveled and divide the by the number of gallons you put in your car and that's your MPG EX 375 miles on 13.5 gallons =27.7 MPG
In the USA almost 53% of waste motor oil is recycled for re-use or refining for fuel energy purposes. That leaves 47% of the 625 million gallons uncollected. Globally, as motor vehicles average 3 to 5 gallons per year and the world vehicle count is expected to be 1 billion by 2010, there will be nearly 4 billion gallons requiring collection and recycling.
Nobody on the planet uses Imperial gallons anymore, the US uses US gallons and the UK (British) dropped the Imperial gallon when they went Metric (SI) in the 60sGo back and check then re-ask the Q
Total transmission capacity on a 46 RE is about twelve quarts.
as many times as the people re-elect them