If we assume that every drop of 0.1 ml. 1 liter = 10,000 drops
"Drops" come in many different sizes (the biggest raindrops have as much water as a thousand of the smallest raindrops and the smallest raindrops are a million times as massive as the typical cloud or fog droplet). However, some old cookbooks reckon that there are 72 drops to a teaspoon and there are roughly 200 teaspoons to the liter, so 14,400 drops per liter is a pretty close answer. You could call it 15,000 and not be far wrong.
it all depends on the size of a drop rroun about 60,000
In college chem when titrating we were told to take 10 drops per mL, thus there would be 10,000 drops per liter. Other texts cite 10, 15, 20, even up to 60 drops per milliliter when dealing with intravenous drip calculations in medicine - so, depending on what source you use, that could mean up to sixty thousand drops in that bottle.
Depending on the size if the drops, between 1000 and 100000.
30 drops equals how many tsps?
It takes 1,000 milliliters to make just 1 liter. Surely 5 milliliters is not enough to make 5 liters.
15 tbsp EQUAL HOW MANY DROPS?
Depends how large the drops are.
Assuming the gasoline has the same approximate drop size as water, there are 20 drops per ml. Therefore 2 drops per second = 120 drops/min = 7200 drops/hr = 172800 drops/day = 1,209,600 drops/wk Divide that by 20000 (drops/liter) gives you about 60.5 liters.
~60 drops solution: 20 drops/mL * 3 mL = 60 drops
Without counting the drops on the inversions there are 3 drops.