A cc is a measure of volume, a kg is a measure of mass and it is not possible to convert one into the other. For example, 10 cc of water will have a much smaller mass than 10 cc of lead.
You can't convert cc/min to cc/lbs.
To convert ml to cc (cubic cm) replace the ml with cc. ml and cc are the same thing. 1 ml = 1 cc Millilitres is the new SI (Metric) measurement of volume, based on a liquid measure of a litre. Cubic centimeters are based in the same SI system but are no longer an SI standard measurement of liquid.
10cc 10cc you can't cm is a length, cc is a volume
One cc = 0.001 liters = 1 ml, 29.57353 cc = 1 ounce Millimeters are a measure of length, not volume. One cc of liquid in a short, fat glass would be fewer millimeters high then one cc of liquid in a tall, thin glass. Please rethink your question and ask again.
A cc is a measure of volume, a kg is a measure of mass and it is not possible to convert one into the other. For example, 10 cc of water will have a much smaller mass than 10 cc of lead.
You can't convert cc/min to cc/lbs.
A convert cc has 350 horsepower
This vary upon the type of HCG being taken. The simplest way is to divide the amount of cc by 10.
30cc (ml)= 1 fluid ounce; there are 8 ounces in a cup (liquid)so 30x8=240cc
You need to say what the liquid or gas is. You can't diectly convert a volume to a weight,
it depends on the concentration of the medication... in mg/ml... you can convert mg/ml to mg/cc as 1 ml = 1 cc. If your medication is at a concentration of 10 mg/ml, then you have 10 mg in 1 cc. You can calculate 1 mg in 0,1 cc.
You would need to know what the liquid is, or what the density of the liquid is, in order to calculate that. For pure water at "standard temperature", 1 gram is defined to be equal to one cubic centimeter (cc). So 10 cc of water equals 10 grams.
2 teaspoonsful equals 10 cc (or 10 ml).
HP does not directly relate to cc
To convert ml to cc (cubic cm) replace the ml with cc. ml and cc are the same thing. 1 ml = 1 cc Millilitres is the new SI (Metric) measurement of volume, based on a liquid measure of a litre. Cubic centimeters are based in the same SI system but are no longer an SI standard measurement of liquid.
To convert cubic centimeters (cc) to liters (L), divide the number of cc by 1000. This is because 1 liter is equal to 1000 cc.