36% of the way to the 1ml line.
How full should a 1ml oral syringe be to have 2.5mg in it??
Where is 0.9ml on the 3ml syringe?
How would you draw up 0.18 in a 1ml syringe
1cc = 1ml. So on the syringe marked in ccs, it should be 1cc.
CC stands for cubic centimeters. ML stands for Milliliters. One cc is equal to one ml. So, if you need 1ml you can use 1cc or 1/5 of a 5cc syringe.
There is no difference. 1 cubic centimeter (cc) and 1 milliliter (mL) are the same volume.
In a 2.5ml/2ml syringe measurement is given in 0.1ml intervals.So for 0.75ml you have to take in between the 0.7 and 0.8ml mark.0,5ml,1ml.1.5ml are marked by large lines and 0.ml intervals by small lines.
1ml in a syringe is far more accurate than 1ml in a dropper. as well as everything else, a 1ml syringe allows precise and dropwise addition to a reaction vessel for example.
Normally when working with injection medications, always go with the smallest syringe. If asked to withdraw 0.3 mL then use a 1mL syringe. If that isn't doable, then use the 3mL syringe. If asked to draw 4mL, use the 5 and so on. As far as a vein graft however, I believe a 3mL syringe will create higher peak pressure and velocity than that of a 10 or 20 mL syringe.
With the syringes I use anyway, there are 9 graduations before the 1ml. If this doesn't exist, you need to eyeball half way up the syringe
1 ml = 1 cc this applies to all metric mesurements reguardles of profession.