The answer depends on the source of the drops (e.g. an eye-droppers vs a leady faucet). In general though, 1 cc = 1 mL = ~20 drops
1,000 cc
1,000 cc
The cc or the "mil"; that is the cubic centimetre or the millilitre. They are equal measures.
There are 1000 cc in 1 liter.
The answer depends on the source of the drops (e.g. an eye-droppers vs a leady faucet). In general though, 1 cc = 1 mL = ~20 drops
10 drops = 0.648 cc 1 gal = 3.785 liters do the math
An eyedropper typically holds around 1 milliliter of liquid, which is equivalent to 1 cubic centimeter (cc).
Facts:120 drops = 5mL1 gallon = 3785 mL* 90840 Drops in 1 GallonIf a faucet dripped once a second how many gallons of water would it waste?It would waste 347 Gallons of water a year!Facts:1 year ~ 31,536,000 seconds24 drops in 1 mL1 gallon/3785 mL X (1 mL/24 drops) X (1 drop/ 1 s) X (31,536,000 s/ 1 year) = 347.1598415 gallons / year
Difficult to answer as it depends on the dropper and the liquid. As a general rule there are 25 to 30 drops in one cubic centimeter/centimetre, cm3
Death
That is 5,000 cc
2,750 cc
250
1 gallon = 3785.41 cc
473.176473 cc American568.26125 cc UK
15 cc in a tablespoon.