You do not use water to extinguish fuel fires. Water will only spread it.
2
36.25 gallons and 12.5 gallons represent two different volumes of liquid. When combined, they total 48.75 gallons. This measurement could be relevant in various contexts, such as fuel, water storage, or other liquid measurements.
You will use about 9.2 gallons of fuel on the trip.
32 miles per 4 gallons = 32/4 miles per 4/4 gallons = 8 miles per 1 gallon = 8/2 miles per 1/2 gallon = 4 miles per 1/2 gallon
You will need 1.107 gallons of fuel.
This question can be answered in three ways. It takes 1851 gallons of water to refine a barrel of crude oil. One barrel of crude oil produces 19 gallons of gasoline and 10 gallons of diesel fuel, in this respect it takes 97 gallons of water to produce a gallon of gasoline. If you combine gasoline and diesel, it takes 63 gallons of water to produce a gallon of "fuel." A total of 42 gallons of petroleum products are produced from a barrel of crude oil, in this respect it takes 44 gallons of water to produce each gallon.
A gallon of water weighs approximately 8.34 pounds, so 5 gallons of water weighs about 41.7 pounds. In comparison, gasoline weighs around 6 to 6.3 pounds per gallon, making 5 gallons of gasoline weigh roughly 30 to 31.5 pounds. Therefore, the fuel in a 5-gallon can weighs about 10.5 to 11.7 pounds less than the water in a 5-gallon bucket.
miles ÷ (miles/gallon) * ($/gallon) = miles * (gallons/mile) * ($/gallon) = (miles * gallons * $) / (miles * gallons) = $ So divide 560 mi by the vehicle's fuel economy, then multiply the quotient by the fuel cost.
To convert pounds to gallons for diesel fuel, you need to know the density. On average, 1 gallon of diesel fuel weighs about 7 pounds. Therefore, 207,538 pounds of diesel fuel would be approximately 29,648 gallons (207,538 pounds / 7 pounds per gallon).
To calculate the fuel cost for a 300-mile trip, you'll need to know the vehicle's fuel efficiency (miles per gallon) and the current price of fuel per gallon. For example, if your vehicle gets 25 miles per gallon and fuel costs $3 per gallon, you'd use 12 gallons for the trip (300 miles ÷ 25 mpg). Multiplying the gallons used by the price per gallon, the total fuel cost would be $36 (12 gallons × $3).
20 gallons
1.4
One gallon of aviation fuel weighs approximately 6 to 6.5 pounds, depending on the specific type of fuel. For example, Jet A fuel typically weighs around 6.5 pounds per gallon. Therefore, to find the total weight of airplane fuel, you can multiply the number of gallons by the weight per gallon. For instance, 100 gallons of Jet A fuel would weigh about 650 pounds.
I believe it was 13 gallons it is a 15 gallon tank.
7.1 gallons @ 4.2lbs per gallon.
2
950 divided by 9 = 105.6 (to one decimal place) gallons of fuel.