TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

If A 2-l Bottle Of Soda Is 2 Dollars How Much Is It Per 10 Ml

How many milliliters are in a 2-liter bottle?

No, "milli" means 1/1000. Each liter has 1000 ml.

How much dollar amount fits in a 5 gallon water bottle? All quarters.?

There is no way to determine exactly how many quarters will fit in a 5 gallon bottle, as there is some randomization to the space in between the quarters. But a good approximation would be:

Determine the volume of a quarter. According to the US Mint (http://www.usmint.gov/about_the_mint/index.cfm?flash=yes&action=coin_specifications) a quarter is 24.26 mm in diameter and 1.75 mm thick. This would give you a volume of:

(pi*12.13^2)*1.75 = approximately 809 mm^3

Divide that by 1000 to get cubic centimeters or ml

809/1000 = 0.809 ml per quarter.

A 5 gallon bottle, converted to liters has a volume of

5 * 3.785 = 18.925 liters or 18925 ml

Not accounting for air space divide that total volume by the volume of a quarter

18925 ml / 0.809 ml = 23393 quarters

Multiply that by 0.25 to get your dollar amount

23393 * $0.25 = $5848.25

Accounting for air space, it would be a pretty safe bet to figure you could get $5500 in a 5 gllon bottle.

How much liquid is actually in a "2 litre" bottle of soda?

Unsurprisingly, 2 litres.To be pedantic about it, on average not less than 2l, and not more than 1.5% less than claimed per individual bottle.Doing the calculations, that means absolutely no less than 1970ml in each individual 2l bottle.Since the average amount over all bottles filled must stay at or above 2000ml, and using the allowable tolerances to systematically underfill bottles is explicitly illegal, most manufacturers tend to overfill the bottles ever so slightly.In Germany, that is. As far as I know the EU standards are identical, and standards in the rest of the world are very similar.§ 22 FertigPackV 1981

The label on a 2-liter bottle of soda indicates that one serving is 8 fluid ounces and that there are 8 servin?

HELP
Don't i convert this too a cup
when i convert it to a cup it'll be 4c

so the answer would be that it is wrong

The label on a 2-liter bottle of soda indicates that one serving is 8 fluid ounces and that there are 8 servings in the bottle. Are these exact measurements? Explain, using mathematics to justify your a

The label on a 2-liter bottle of soda indicates that one serving is 8 fluid ounces and that there are 8 servin?

Well, they have really mixed their measurements!

8fl oz =0.23647650014779784 or 0.236 of a litre (or 236 ml)

2 litres = 2000ml

2000/236 = 8.47 i.e there are 8 full servings with almost half a serving (0.47) remaining

8 x 236ml = 1888 ml

2000-1888 = 112ml

So, the complete answer is that there are 8 full servings (of 236 ml) with 112ml remaining


(or you can do it the other way round, 2l = 67.66 fl oz)

How much money would you have if you filled a 2 liter bottle with all dimes?

Exactly the same as you had before, but you would have just wasted a lot of time shoving dimes into a plastic bottle.Oh, and I assume you didn’t exactly have these dimes just lying around so you either collected them (that’s a little bit sad) or changed them at a bank (a bit more sad) which meant you wasted all that time at the bank and in between as well.As a rule I don’t tend to store my money in plastic bottles. I have some in a bank account (risky eh?). I also have some in my pockets. But not all the time. Sometimes it sits on the side or in a drawer. I’m betting if I look really hard, I also have some down the back of the sofa or in the pocket of an old jacket.I’m a bit concerned over what happens after. Did you wash the bottle, because spending those dimes will require a lot of washing First - well, possibly, but if not it sounds kind of ‘icky’Here’s the thing. If you have dimes, forget the ‘icky’ unclean plastic bottle and leave it all in the bank (a savings account). Some of them are kind enough to pay slightly more than insulting rates of interest and this is what’s really fun. Every year that you will go back you will have slightly more dimes than before, even though you might not be able to count them or shove them in a bottle.Good luck with that.PS - flexible dimes sound kinda fun. Let’s keep hoping.

If I put 1 dime in a 355 mL bottle every day, how long would it take to fill up? How much money would I have when it's full?

A US dime occupies a tiny bit more than a third of a milliliter. That means that under ideal circumstances, a 355 ml flask could contain slightly less than 1065 dimes: say $100. Of course, dimes do not stack properly within a typical flask: assume there is as much as one third of the volume wasted as empty space, meaning somewhere around $65.But of course, you wouldn’t earn this. At best you would save this, at worst you would simply lose $65 dollars pointlessly filling up a flask.

An 0.9​-liter bottle of Mexican wine costs 230 pesos. What is the price in dollars per​ ounce?

You are told that the 0.9 liter bottle is 230 pesos. So if we divide them we can get the price per ounce:

230 / 0.9 (pesos/l)
(2300/9) (pesos/l)

To get dollars (presuming US dollars) per ounce, we have two conversions. We have to convert currencies and volumes. So I'll go to google to get those conversions, since I don't know what they are off the top of my head:

There are 21.59 pesos per dollar (as of today, which of course can change over time) and 33.814 oz per liter.

So working in those conversions, multiplying and dividing as needed to line up the labels to cancel out, we get:

(2300/9) (pesos/l) (1/21.59 USD/peso) (1/33.814 l/oz)

This simplifies to:

2300/6570.39834 USD/oz

or approx:

$0.35 per oz or 35 cents per oz.

Why does a 2 litre bottle of soda often cost less than a 20 ounce bottle? What is the cost breakdown behind soda? Is the pricing somehow reflective of actual underlying costs like bottling, distribution, and advertising?

There are a couple things that haven’t been mentioned yet that anyone reading this might find interesting.First off, a 2 liter and a 20 oz bottle often start off as the same (if not similar) unformed blank…So the cost is nearly identical from a packaging standpoint.From a product standpoint, typically as you purchase a product, the more of it you buy, the less it is per a given quantity. In other words, you get the benefit of volume pricing.Or, the less you buy, the most expensive it is per a given quantity.Buying the single-serve version of anything versus a 6-pack or case or a pallets worth is pretty much the most expensive way to go.Costco and Sam’s Club have done an excellent job of teaching this to almost the entire U.S. population. Save money, buy in quantity. We just get your whole paycheck in the process… :)

TRENDING NEWS