There are approximately 15 macro drops in 1 ml.
There are approximately 20 drops in 1 ml of most eye drops, including PetVision.
It generally takes around 20 drops to make 1 milliliter (ml) of liquid, but this can vary slightly depending on the size and viscosity of the drops.
There are about 1,020 drops in 2 ounces of food coloring.
Each dose from a 15 ml container would be 4 ml (15 ml / 60 doses). Given that 1 ml equals 32 drops, each dose would contain 128 drops (4 ml * 32 drops).
There are approximately 15 macro drops in 1 ml.
1000
1 medical drop = 1/12 mL 1 tablespoon = 14.786748 mL So there are 14.786748 * 12 drops in a tablespoon or 177.440976 drops per tbsp.
If we assume that every drop of 0.1 ml. 1 liter = 10,000 drops
Eight mL is 160 drops.
(150 ml / 1 hour) x (10 drops / ml) x (1 hour / 60 minutes) = (150 x 10 / 60) (ml - drop - hour / hour - ml - minute) = (1,500 / 60) = 25 drops / minute
There are approximately 240 drops in 10 ml. Therefore 2.5 ml contains about 60 drops.
~60 drops solution: 20 drops/mL * 3 mL = 60 drops
There is around 15 to 20 drops in one ML. The liquid viscosity will change this answer. You may consider that there is 80 to 100 drops in a 5ml bottle.
There are 20 metric drops to a ml. There are 1000 ml to a L This gives us 20000 drops to a L 1 US gallons = 3.785 liters 1 Imperial gallons = 4.546 liters 1 US gallons = 75708 metric drops 1 Imperial gallons = 90922 metric drops
50*10 = 500 drops.
20 drops = 1ml 20 drops = 1cc 1ml = 1cc