There are typically 8 to 12 two-liter soda bottles in a case, depending on the brand and packaging size.
Only one, but you have to fill it and dump it almost 6 times.
To serve 150 8 ounce drinks, you will need 1,200 ounces of soda in total. Since 1 gallon is equal to 128 ounces, the total amount needed is 9.375 gallons. This is equivalent to roughly 35.4 liters of soda.
2 liters are 2000 milliliters.
When bought at a store, I would hope that there was no Pepsi in a Coke (Coca-cola) bottle; I would expect a 2 liter Coke bottle to contain 2000 milliliters of Coke not 2000 milliliters of Pepsi: The capacity of a 2 liter bottle in milliliters is: 1 liter = 1000 milliliters → 2 liters = 2 × 1000 ml = 2000 ml.
A three-liter bottle of soda contains 3000 milliliters. 1 liter is equivalent to 1000 milliliters.
2000
400 milliliters because there are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter bottle of soda. So 1000 minus 600= 400
3000 mlThere are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter. One milliliter is 0.001 liter.
.002 mL
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There are 3000 milliliters in a 3-liter soda bottle.
There are about 10 glasses of soda in each bottle. Figure each person will drink two or three glasses of soda during your party, so you'd need 60 x 3 = 180 glasses total. That would divide out to be about 18 bottles, and you might want to round up to 20 or even 25 if you know you can get rid of any extra soda afterwards.
There are 1000 milliliters in 1 liter. One milliliter is 0.001 liter
Depends: what's your water source? How fast is it flowing? How large of an opening do the bottles have? How many can you fill simultaneously? If we're talking a hundred bottles simultaneously at niagara falls, I'd say all 100 could be filled in 2 minutes; if we're talking standard soda bottles at a tap in the kitchen, depends on how fast you move & how strong you turn on your sink.
Great for liter bottles is better. For small-ml bottle is better.
There are typically 8 to 12 two-liter soda bottles in a case, depending on the brand and packaging size.