That depends entirely on what the miles per gallon figure is ! If you get 50 miles to the gallon, you'd need 140 gallons, which would be ten tankfulls. HOWEVER - if you get 65 to the gallon, the figure will be less !
Assuming you go all the way to empty each time, you would need to fill up 1.3 times.
The answer depends on the efficiency of the vehicle in miles per gallon, as well as the price of gasoline. An average automobile goes 20 miles on a gallon of gas. Divide distance by efficiency (1000 miles divided by 20 miles per gallon results in 50 gallons.) If gas costs $3 per gallon, then the fuel used by this car to travel 1000 miles would cost $150 and you would need to fill up twice. If you drive a hybrid at 33 miles per gallon, the cost would be $90 (one tank of gas used). If you drive a truck or SUV at 10 miles per gallon, the cost would be $300 with four fill-ups.
Fill the 5-gallon jug with liquid. Pour the liquid into the 7-gallon jug. Fill the 5-gallon jug with liquid and top-off the 7-gallon jug with the liquid of the 5-gallon. There will one gallon of liquid left in the 5-gallon jug. Empty the contents of the 7-gallon jug and fill it with the one gallon left in the 5-gallon jug. Fill the 5-gallon jug with liquid and pour it into the 7-gallon jug that contains one gallon of liquid. Do the math, one gallon plus five gallons equals six gallons of liquid.
Fill the 5 gallon jug Pour from the 5 gallon to fill the 3 gallon jug You now have 2 gallons in the 5 gallon jug Empty the 3 gallon jug Pour the 2 gallons from the 5 gallon jug into the 3 gallon jug Fill the 5 gallon jug Pour from the 5 gallon jug to fill the three gallon jug -- this will tale 1 gallon You now have 4 gallons in the 5 gallon jug
Divide the trip of 2400 by 12 to get number of total gallons needed=200 and divide that by the 24 gallons at each fill up to get number of fill ups = 8.333...
-- Divide 462/3 by the number of miles per gallon your vehicle averages. -- The quotient is the number of full tanks you'll consume in driving 700 miles. -- If you start out with a full tank, then [ that number minus 1 ] is the number of times you'll need to fill up on the way.
29 miles per gallon on a 25 gallon tank is 25*29 = 725 miles per tank. So one [partial] fill will be enough.
1232/46 mpg = 26.78 gals. needed 27 gals/10 gallon tank= fill up 3 times
Assuming you go all the way to empty each time, you would need to fill up 1.3 times.
At 19 miles per gallon times 9 gallons you can travel 171 miles on a full tank.You will not need to fill up only once (and that would be at the start of your journey) if you need to travel only 99.91 miles (= less than 171 miles).The speed of 55 mph is not part of the solution.
You need to know the capacity of your tank - which, in your case, would be in gallons and the fuel efficiency of your vehicle - which would be in miles per gallon. The capacity or volume of a tank cannot be measured in miles per gallon.
about 40 million miles to the gallon so you only have to fill it up once
Ooops! Read your question and see if you can spot what you left out.That's right. The size of the gas tank ... how much it holds.If you drive 2,000 miles and you get 19 miles per gallon, then you use2,000/19 = 105.263 gallonson the trip. How many times will you need to fill the tank ? Depends on how muchit holds.-- If it holds 106 gallons and you start out full, then you never have to addany gas at all.-- But if it only holds 1 gallon, then you'll have to gas up 106 times duringthe trip.
I got 36 last fill up.
You can do 420 miles on a tank full. Assuming you start with a full tank of petrol, then you will have to refill after 420 miles, 840 miles, 1,260 miles therefore the answer is three times and you will have a part full tank left. However if you include the initial tank full then the answer is 4 times. Note the answer would be the same all the way up to 1,680 miles when you'd need to fill up again. Also note the speed is a red herring in this question.
Fill fuel tankMake note of mileageAt next fill-up make note of amount of fuel needed to fill and number of miles driven Divide number of miles by number of gallons used Do this 2 or 3 times for an accurate average
half a mile