Impossible to be accurate as there is no single transformer oil but it will most probably be more dense than water, so it will be more than 1kg, perhaps 1.1kg??????? To be accurate you need the density.
10
1.185Kg
1 litre of furnace oil will have a mass of 0.998 kg. The temperature of the oil is irrelevant.
Oil is slightly less dense than water and a litre of water weighs a kilogram. It would be less than a kilogram, but by how much depends on the type of oil.
You need liquid density ( kg per litre ) > Some example densities ( kg per litre) Water = 1.0 Petrol = 0.737 Beer = 1.01 Kerosene = 0.82 Paraffin = 0.8 > 1 US gallon = 3.7854 litres, then * density of liquid ( kg per litre ) = kgs or: 1 UK gallon = 4.5461 litres, then * density of liquid ( kg per litre ) = kgs
Litres is a measure of volume - the size in space, while oz measure mass and weight. Water has a mass of 1 kg per litre.
Density = 10 kg / 5 litres = 2 kg per litre.
1 litre of furnace oil will have a mass of 0.998 kg. The temperature of the oil is irrelevant.
1KG of transformer oil will sum up to 0.815litres.
0.54 kg / litre
316
The oil should be greater than 100M Ohms resistance. If a flash over occurs within the transformer the oil has to be replaced
There are 1135 litres of cooking oil to the tonne.
1liter of olive oil = 0,92kg1 litre of water = 1 kgNot plural (kilograms), not even 1.0 kg, but less than 1.0 kg in one litre of olive oil.
Not sure about 1 litter, but the mass of 1 litre of sesame oil is approx 0.922 kg.
A Kg or Kilogram is a fixed measurement, the weight of a litre of water or approximately 2.2046 pounds.
mWH = ( SGWH ) ( mWA ) = ( 0.93 ) ( 1.0 kg / L ) = 0.93 kg
With a simple balance you can find the weight (weight = mass in this case) of air. I propose the following method. Take the weight of the container (suppose it is a 1 litre container). And the weight is x kg. Take weight of the container full of water, say it is y kg. Weight of 1 litre of water is 1 kg. So the weight of the container is 'y -1' kg. So the weight of the air in it is 'x - y +1' kg. It should be around 1.2 gm.
Density of Transformer Oil at 29.5oC is 0.89g/cm3.The exact density of transformer oil depends upon the manufacturer but, expressed in SI units, is typically a little less than 900 kg/m3 at 20oC. The J&P Transformer Book states that 'a limit of 895 kg/m3 at 20oC ensures that the temperature (of the oil) must fall to -20oC before the density of the oil would exceed that of ice' -thus ensuring that if ice forms, then it would remain at the bottom of the tank.