Look on the sticker on the window before you buy, or ask the dealer. There will be 2 numbers given: average MPG for city driving under normal conditions, and Open Road under normal conditions.
However, many factors are involved with how many miles per gallon (MPG) you will average with your car. These include:
You can figure your gas usage by letting the tank get close to 1/8th or 1/4th tank full (use the same mark each time). Drive to the gas station and write down the numbers from the odometer, including the number that continually rolls (so your number will have a decimal, such as xxx.1. Fill your tank; write down how many gallons of gas you purchased. Repeat this next time you get close to your 'mark' you used before. Subtract the smaller odometer reading from the newest, larger reading. That is how far you traveled since your last fill-up. Divide this by total number gallons of gas purchased the first time. Then, fill up your tank again. Repeat, to get an average over a period of time.
You need to know how many miles per gallon the vehicle travels.
Can't answer that, not enough info. Need to know the mpg (miles per gallon) the vehicle gets.
There is not enough information to solve this problem. You need to know the mileage of the vehicle. That is, how many miles per gallon does it get?
You need a longer question. How many miles per gallon does your vehicle get? If you know that it get 25 miles per gallon - just divide that number into 13.2
Gonna need to know the MPG (Miles Per Gallon) the vehicle gets.
Impossible to answer ! We would need to know the miles per gallon figure for the vehicle !
Drive from California to Maryland and you will find out stupid or use Map quest and they will figure it out for you, provided you know how many miles per gallon you get with your vehicle. So they divide the miles per gallon your vehicle gets into total miles driven multiplied by the price of gasoline per gallon.
The fuel economy of a vehicle is something that should be know by the driver. The 1971 Monte Carlo gets somewhere between 16 to 24 miles per gallon.
Need to know what mpg the vehicle gets to answer that one.
You need to know the capacity of your tank - which, in your case, would be in gallons and the fuel efficiency of your vehicle - which would be in miles per gallon. The capacity or volume of a tank cannot be measured in miles per gallon.
We need to know how many miles per gallon the vehicle gets in order to answer that one.
Most vehicles' low fuel light comes on with one to two gallons of gas left. If you know how many miles per gallon your vehicle gets, just figure on one gallon to be safe. For instance... if your car or truck gets 20 miles per gallon, when the light comes on you should figure you have 20 miles AT MOST to refuel.