You need to know the fuel efficiency of the vehicle when you are driving (driving styles do make a difference).
Use the fuel efficiency to calculate the amount of gas you will need and then use the gas price to calculate the cost of fuel.
You need to know the fuel efficiency of the vehicle when you are driving (driving styles do make a difference).
Use the fuel efficiency to calculate the amount of gas you will need and then use the gas price to calculate the cost of fuel.
You need to know the fuel efficiency of the vehicle when you are driving (driving styles do make a difference).
Use the fuel efficiency to calculate the amount of gas you will need and then use the gas price to calculate the cost of fuel.
You need to know the fuel efficiency of the vehicle when you are driving (driving styles do make a difference).
Use the fuel efficiency to calculate the amount of gas you will need and then use the gas price to calculate the cost of fuel.
It is a seven hour driving trip covering 457 miles.
This depends on the price of gas per gallon. Say the price of gas per gallon is p. The total number of gallons needed is (380 miles)/(20 miles per gallon) which is 19. The cost of the trip would be p times the number of gallons, or 17p. For example, the average price of gas in the United States as of January 30, 2012, was $3.50 dollars per gallon. The price of the trip would be (19 gallons) times ($3.5 dollars per gallon), which is $66.50. Another example: the average price of gas in Michigan as of January 30, 2012, was $3.39 dollars per gallon. The price of the trip would be (19 gallons) times ($3.39 dollars per gallon), which is $64.41.
1011 miles, divided by 25 MPG = 40.44 gallons for the trip 40.44 gallons multiplied by 3.25 price per gallon = $131.43 is the cost of the trip
Take the number of miles of your trip. Divide by your fuel economy (miles per gallon). This will get the number of gallons needed. Then multiply by the expected price per gallon. Gasbuddy has a neat tool, which you can input make and model of vehicle (and estimate the fuel economy if you do not know it), along with where you are traveling to and from, then it will give suggestions of where to fill up based on reported gas prices along your route. It picks the least expensive reported prices.
You will use approximately 103 gallons of fuel for this trip. At today's fuel price of $3.50 per gallon you will spend $360.50 in fuel for this trip.
Depends on the price of fuel. 250 divide by 22 = 11.36 gallon of fuel required for the trip. Multiply that by the price of fuel per gallon.
it depends on your mph and gas prices? if it's only 25mph then your trip wld approx cost you between $300 to $500(depends on gas prices). you take the miles divide by mph, then take that and times it by gas price and that will be your total for your trip
approximatley how many miles would the trip west be?
50 miles
$256.00
To calculate ton miles on a drill line, use the standard formula. The formula is RTTM = (Wp x D x (Lp + D) + (2 x D) x (2 x Wb + Wc)) â?¦ (5280 x 2000). RTTM is round trip ton miles.
65 trips at 62 miles per trip = 4030 miles.