38319-36213= 2106/136= 15.4852 miles per gallon
A gallon is larger than a liter, but if you measure some liquid, the number of liters will be larger than the number of gallons.
A gallon has 3.785 liters, so you can divide by that number. (This refers to the U.S. gallon; some other standards exist for the gallon as well.)
There are 4.54609 litres in an imperial (UK) gallon and 3.78541 litres in a US liquid gallon and 4.40488 litres in a US dry gallon. To convert litres to any particular unit, multiply the number of gallons by the number of litres in that particular "flavor" of gallon to get your answer.One Gallon is 3.7854118 litres.For US measure, gallons x 3.785 = liters
There isn't a whole number. A gallon is 128 ounces. I checked and there is one-eighth of a gallon in 16 ounces.
14 qts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
divide the miles on the odometer by the number of gallons you put in. Just make sure you reset it every time.
75.4 gallons. You divide your number of gallons by the number of liters in a gallon. There are 3.78 liters in a gallon. So you take 285 liters/(3.78 liters/1 gallon): 285/3.78 = 75.4 gallons
multipy the gallons by 4 to get quarts 1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
Start with a full tank of gas. Set your trip odometer to zero. When it's time to fill up, note how many gallons it takes to refill the tank and also note the mileage you traveled. Then, divide the number of miles by the number of gallons to refill the tank. The result is your mpg.
There are 4 quarts in 1 gallon. So, Q quarts is equal to Q/4 gallons.
You are getting approximately 17.78 miles per gallon. However, to more accurately check the miles per gallon, you should fill your tank as full as you can get it, reset your trip odometer if available on your vehicle - or write down your current odometer reading when you fill up. Then drive your vehicle to as close to empty as you dare. Then fill your tank as full as you can get it again. This time, check the gas pump for how many gallons you actually put into your car - this should print out on your receipt from the gas station, but write down the gallons if it does not. While you're still at the pump, check your trip odometer if you have one - or subtract the odometer reading you previously wrote down from the current odometer reading, to get your miles driven during the tank of gas you just used. Then divide the number of miles driven by the number of gallons you put in your car to come up with your miles per gallon. Say for example, you actually drove 327 miles during that tank, and the pump at the gas station says you actually put in 17.36 gallons (we rarely drive our vehicles until we completely run out of gas and use up the full 18 gallon capacity), so you would divide 327 by 17.36 to come up with approximately 18.34 miles per gallon. Good luck!
1 gallon = 4 quarts, so multiply the number of gallons by 4 to get the number of quarts.
Mega is the prefix meaning one million, therefore there are one million (1,000,000) gallons in a mega gallon
1 gallon = 4 quarts 1 quart = 0.25 gallon
A gallon is larger than a liter, but if you measure some liquid, the number of liters will be larger than the number of gallons.
4 quarts in a gallon (hence the name "quart" =quarter ) So 8 quart in 2 gallon.
The idea is to 1) Divide the miles by the miles-per-gallon, to get the number of gallons, and then 2) Multiply the number of gallons by the price per gallon.