(320 miles) / (11.5 gallons) = 27.826 mpg (rounded)
We cannot answer this because.... you forgot to include the miles per gallon figure ! A car that only has a 15-gallon fuel tank could drive just as far as the one in your example - if it did more miles to the gallon !
25/7 = 3.571 gallons (rounded)
If you have a gallon, you only can have one gallon.
# Fill the 4-gallon jug with water then put it in the 9-gallon jug. # Repeat this step. The 9-gallon jug now has 8 gallons. # Fill the 4-gallon jug a third time, but pour only enough into the 9-gallon jug to fill it completely with no overflow. # The 4-gallon jug now has three gallons. Put that water aside safely, then repeat 1-3 for a total of six gallons.
381 gallons of oil divide by 21 gallon containers = 18 full containers which will use 378 gallons of oil. Container 19 will have only 3 gallons in it.
We cannot answer this because.... you forgot to include the miles per gallon figure ! A car that only has a 15-gallon fuel tank could drive just as far as the one in your example - if it did more miles to the gallon !
25/7 = 3.571 gallons (rounded)
(70 miles/trip) divided by (1 gallon/19 miles) = (70/19) (miles-gallon/trip-miles) = 3.684 gallons per trip. Now, if we only knew how much you pay for a gallon of gas, we could tell you how much the trip will cost.
Depends on how far you drive. If your car goes 40 miles for every gallon, and you only drive 20 miles a day, you only use 1/2 gal of gas per day.
The number of miles driven divided by the amount of gallons to drive that distance. If you drove 330 miles and it took 10 gallons to refill the tank, then you got 33 miles per gallon. You are only able to compute this if you start with a full tank and then refill the tank back to full after you drove a certain distance or start with a specific amount of gas and drive till you run out of gas.
If you have a gallon, you only can have one gallon.
You cannot convert measurements to weights or weights to measurements
That's the wrong question. Tank size does not determine fuel consumption. The only way to ACCURATELY determine fuel consumption is to fill the tank, drive as far as you dare on that tank of fuel, fill the tank again then calculate the mileage by the following:Divide total miles driven on that tank of fuel by the number of gallons used.M/G=MPGWhere:M=miles driven on that tank of fuelG=number of gallons required to REFILL the tank after driving those milesMPG=miles per gallon
6.7 gallons if you only go by math. But take into account stopping, and other things. You should be okay with 8 gallons, I would go minimum 10 just to be safe; you never know what might happen.
This depends entirely on how many miles per gallon (MPG) your car gets. A car that does 82 MPG, will use only 1 gallon. A car that does 41 MPG, will use 2 a gallons. A car that does 20 MPG will use 4 gallons. Divide the number of miles, by the known MPG of the vehicle.
That depends entirely - on how many miles per gallon (mpg) you get from the vehicle ! For example - a car that gives 60 mpg would use less than a car that only gives 40 mpg !
fill the 7 gallon bucket, dump it into the 5 gallon bucket and save the remaining 2 gallons, repeat and you have 4 gallons.