No.
1 liter = 2.11 quarts 1 quart = 0.94 liter
6.5 of anything minus 4.7 of the same thing = 1.8 of the same thing
In the same manner that a quart is almost a liter, a yard is almost a metre
No.
34.5 degrees Celsius is the same as 94.1 degrees Fahrenheit. 34.5 degrees Fahrenheit is the same as 1.4 degrees Celsius.
The weight of water at 100 degrees F will be the same as at any other temperature. The weight of a volume of water is determined by its density, which is 1 gram per milliliter at room temperature. So, for example, 1 liter of water would weigh 1000 grams or 1 kilogram.
I'm not a mechanic / technician but I ASSUME the engine cylinder locations are numbered on the Ford 6.0 liter Diesel engine the same as the 7.3 Diesel firewall 7 - 8 5 - 6 3 - 4 1 - 2 front of vehicle
If one were to pour a liter of water at 40 degrees C into a liter of water at 20 degrees C, the final temperature of the two liters of water becomes 30 degrees C. This is because the free energy capacity, or heat carrying capacity of the two additives are the same, since they are both water.
"Liter" is a volume, equal to 1,000 milliliters, and to 0.001 cubic meter. A liter of Sprite, a liter of Coke, a liter of vodka, a liter of jello, a liter of sand, and a liter of empty space all have the same volume. Liters of different substances in general have different weights.
Most tankers can haul around 8500 gallons of gasoline and the same unit can only haul around 7500 gallons of diesel due to the weight difference between gasoline and diesel. Diesel weighs around 7 lbs per gallon while gasoilne weighs around 5.9 lbs per gallons provided the product is around 60 degrees, thus meaning that during the winter product is heavier and during the summer it is lighter.
tHE CURB WEIGHT OF YOUR TRUCK IS THE SAME AS MINE, without a full tank of diesel fuel it is 7,800 Lbs to the gram seriousley, I used a callibrated semi scale!!
Yes, a UK liter is the same as the US liter. Aren't they both English?!
Of what? There is no universal correlation between volume and weight. 24 ounces of water IS NOT the same volume as 24 ounces of sugar.
It depends on where you live. In America, about 95% of all Mercedes E320s that were sold were powered by a 3.2 liter, gasoline powered 6 cylinder engines; the other 5% were diesel powered. In Europe, many E320s use the same gas engine, but about half of the them are powered by the 3.0 liter turbodiesel 6 that you're talking about.
Yes, gasoleo and regular diesel fuel are the same thing.
Depends on torque and gearing. A 12 or 13 liter diesel engine kicking out 340 horsepower isn't going to be the same as a 5 or 6 liter gas engine doing the same. There's much more to this equation than just horsepower.
diesel, it is just the same