Metric tonne is mass and a gallon is volume; they are not convertibleIf you know the weight of the chemical (liquid) per gallon - you could then convert the Metric Tonne weight to gallons. Water is 8.34 pounds or 3.78 kilograms at 62 °F (17 °C), per Gallon.
1 metric tonne is 0.98419 long ton (UK imperial) or 1.1023113109 short ton (US). 1 metric tonne = 1000 kilograms 1 US short ton = 907.185 kilograms 1 UK long ton = 1016.05 kilograms
1 ton = 1000 Kg exactly That is a metric ton, sometimes spelled "tonne" to distinguish it from the other types of ton. There are also 2 other types of tons: 1 British ton = 1016.047 kg This is rarely used since the UK went metric, and is nearly the same as a metric ton. 1 US ton = 907.1847 kg
4 US tons, 1 US ton is 2000lbs. 1 metric ton is 1000kg
1 metric ton = 1000 Kg It doesn't matter if it is dry sand, wet sand or anything else. A 'metric ton' is often just called a 'tonne', to distinguish it from the other two types of tons (British ton and US ton).
Since gallon is a volume unit and the metric ton is a weight unit there is no possible conversion factor. It all depends on the density of the material.
If you convert one metric ton of water to gallons, you would have 264.2 US gallons. This is equal to 220 UK gallons.
1 tonne is = 1000 kg / 4.5 so 180/4.5=40per gallon (?!) Metric ton = 2204.6 lbs. US gallon = 8.35 lbs. 264 gallons in one metric ton. 264 gallons x .68¢ = $179.52. Based on $180 US per 'metric' ton the cost per US gallon is .68¢ . Please remove original posters answer. (actual cost of jet fuel as of April 2011 is approx. 3.50 gal.)
1.1 US ton per metric ton.
About 1.10231 US tons per metric ton.
-68
Metric tonne is mass and a gallon is volume; they are not convertibleIf you know the weight of the chemical (liquid) per gallon - you could then convert the Metric Tonne weight to gallons. Water is 8.34 pounds or 3.78 kilograms at 62 °F (17 °C), per Gallon.
One metric ton is equal to 1.102 short tons or 0.984 long tons.
Oh, yes. A US ton is 2000 pounds. A metric ton is 2204.6 pounds.
No, a metric ton is equivalent to 1,000 kilograms, while a ton (also known as a short ton) is equivalent to 2,000 pounds or approximately 907 kilograms. Therefore, a metric ton is smaller than a ton.
Petroleum has a specific gravity of 0.88 which means 1 liter weighs 0.88 kilograms. From the volume page we know that: 1 barrel [US, petroleum] = 158.9872972 liter So 1 barrel weighs: 158.9872972 * 0.88 = 139.908821536 kilograms 1 metric ton is 1000 kilograms: 139.908821536 / 1000 = 7.1475121 So there are a little over 7 barrels of petroleum in a metric ton. This is assuming that 0.88 is the correct specific gravity. Since as you said, the grade of the oil may make a difference. If you know the exact specific gravity of the oil in question, you will get more accurate results.
They are the same weight, as one metric ton is equal to one US ton, both equivalent to 2,204.62 pounds or 1,000 kilograms.