They'll need 9 buses. Buses #1 through #8 will be full. Bus #9 will have only 16 students on it.
Q: What is the past tense for trip? A: The past tense for the physical type of trip is TRIPPED. The past tense for the vacation or school type of trip is WENT ON A TRIP.
That's quite easy,5 trips.What you do is guess and check.You carry 3 bundles of wood on your first trip so it can't be 1.On your second trip you would carry 6 so its not 2 trips either.3 trips would be 9 bundles of wood so its ot that.4 would be 12 bundles of wood but you need 13!So the answer is 5 trips because 5x3=15.2 more bundles of wood than what you need.
When you tell someone about your trip, he doesn't want to hear that you stayed on the interstate most of the time and maintained 58 miles per 47 minutes, and that the car averaged almost 19.5 miles per 83 ounces. It's a lot easier to say, easier to understand, and easier to compare, if you reference your results to hours and gallons.
336 pounds of food is needed.
You will need about 20 gallons of gas for the trip (19.948 gallons).
Depends on the milage of the car you are driving.
If you want to figure out how many gallons you will need and you know how many miles per gallon you achieve then 60 / (your miles per gallon) = how many gallons you need. If you want to know how much you used in 60 miles, one method would be to fill up the tank completely before the trip and then again after the trip and how much you put in the second time will tell you how much you used.
To travel 586 miles at 16 mpg you will need at least 36.625 gallons of gasoline.
Take the MPG that the vehicle will average divided into the miles you are going to travel. This will tell you how many gallons of fuel you will need. Example: 25 MPG on a 500 mile round trip will require 20 gallons of fuel. At 2.85 per gallon this trip will cost you $57 in fuel costs.
It depends on where you're coming from and whether you're talking about flying or sailing.
31 gallons
31 gallons
27.8 Gallons.
(the original of this question uses a 216 mile trip, which takes 9 gallons) For a trip of 1176 miles, divide the miles by the miles per gallon to find the number of gallons needed. 1176 / 24 = 49 gallons
If your car gets 19.7 mpg, a 547-mile trip will consume about 27.7 US gallons of fuel.
2,900÷14 equals 207.1 gallons of fuel required for this trip.