A metric conversion table can be found at:
http://www.metric-conversion-tables.com/autometricconversion.htm
One liter equals 0.26 gallons, so 57 liters would equal 14.82 gallons. 15.057806984414459676654295531722
You can also download Calculator Plus from Microsoft.com. It has a conversion table on it for weights & measures. There are a lot of downloadable calculators online; just do a search. I'm sure Yahoo Widgets has some too.
15 gallons or 57 liters.15 gallons or 57 liters.
57 liters equals 14.8 us gallons there are 3.85 liters in a us gallon
Fifty-seven liters is equivalent to around 15.06 gallons.
A gallon U.S. gallons are different from imperial gallons. 1 Imperial gallon is equal to 4.54609188 litres and 1 US gallon is equal to 3.78541178 litres. Liters on the other hand are the same everywhere. One liter equals 0.26 U.S. gallon or 0.219 Imperial gallon.
Let x be the liters of the 30% acid solution and y be the liters of the 60% acid solution. We can set up a system of equations: x + y = 50 (total liters) and 0.3x + 0.6y = 0.57*50 (acid content). Solving this system of equations, we find that x = 20 liters of the 30% acid solution and y = 30 liters of the 60% acid solution.
15 gallons/57 liters
With the 4 cylinder engine ( 57 liters / 15 U.S. gallons ) With the V6 engine ( 61 liters / 16 U.S. gallons )
57 liters.
57000 ml = 57 liters
A household in the U.S uses about 70.5 gallons a day; it really differs from household to household. One website (see related links) states:Shower: 15-30 gallons a day which is about (57-114 liters).Brushing teeth with the water running is about 1-2 gallons (38-57 liters).Shaving with the water running is 10-15 gallons (38-57 liters).Washing dishes by hand is 20 gallons(75 liters).Washing dishes in the dishwasher 9-12 gallons(34-45 liters).Last but not least, flushing the toilet is 5-7 gallons(19-26 liters).---------A normal person (non-spender) use at home (kitchen, bath, etc. - not in garden or garage) max. 1o m3 water/month - cold or warm water; the mean for a day is333 L.
That is 57,000 litres
There is no such thing as "an average toilet leak" . -I repair toilets almost every day and see leaks from all kinds of places. Very few of them would waste even one gallon of water in a week. -But they are still annoying and damaging to flooring.