Yes
Divide the number of miles travelled by the number of gallons of gasoline used.
10/1.29=7.75or7.8
23 gallon.
12 cups 1 gallon = 16 cups 1 cup = 0.06 gallon
75.4 gallons. You divide your number of gallons by the number of liters in a gallon. There are 3.78 liters in a gallon. So you take 285 liters/(3.78 liters/1 gallon): 285/3.78 = 75.4 gallons
To find this answer simply divide the number of miles by the gallons of gas you had754.7/48.6=15.528 MPG
Multiply $3.70 times the number of gallons used. Get the number of gallons used by using a proportion. 22/1=800/x 800/22=36.36 gallons 36.36x3.70=134.53 This is about 16.8 cents per mile.
multipy the gallons by 4 to get quarts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
To calculate the number of gallons of gasoline Jordan needs each day for his commute, divide the total distance of 67 miles by his car's mileage of 21 miles per gallon. This gives 3.19 gallons. Since he can't purchase a fraction of a gallon, he would need to round up to 4 gallons to ensure he has enough fuel for the round trip each day.
Divide the number of quarts by 4 to get the number of gallons. e.g. 20 quarts is 5 gallons, 1 quart is .25 gallons, etc. The name "quart" is for "quarter of a gallon."
1 gallon = 4 quarts, so multiply the number of gallons by 4 to get the number of quarts.
Divide the number of ounces in a gallon of gasoline by the number of ounces of oil (both fluid measurements). 128/2.6=49 (about) Essentially this is a 50:1 mix. Conversely if you want a 50:1 mix divide 128 by 50. Answer is 2.56. for 2 gallons 256/50=5.1 ounces. 2-1/2 gallons of gas will take 6.4 ounces of oil.