In 1927, the Department of Commerce standardized the height and weight of mike bottles. The standardized weight of a quart sized milk bottle was 25.5 ounces. Different sized bottles, in different countries, and perhaps made of different materials would likely vary greatly in weight.
A lttle less than 60 grams.
It is 0.95 g/cm3
4.14 kg
40 grams
It varies from jug to jug but if you want to find out the capacity of your jug fill it up with water and then pour it into a measuring device.
A toaster, a blender, a fair-sized skillet, Water is 8 pounds to the gallon so a slightly less than half empty jug of milk, three cans of pop/beer
Fill small 3 liter jug with water. Pour into large 8 liter jug. Repeat. Now 6 liters of water in large jug. Repeat again but stop when large jug full. Leaves 1 liter in small jug. Empty large jug. Pour water from small jug into large jug. Refill small jug and pour into large jug. There are now 4 liters of water in large jug.
Method 1: Fill the 3-gallon jug. Pour this into the 5-gallon jug. Fill the 3-gallon jug again, and pour from it into the 5-gallon jug until it is full. This leaves 1 gallon in the 3-gallon jug. Empty the 5-gallon jug, and then pour the gallon from the 3-gallon jug into it. Fill the 3-gallon jug, and pour it into the 5-gallon jug, thus making 4 gallons. Method 2: Fill the 5-gallon jug. Pour this into the 3-gallon jug until it's full. Empty the 3-gallon jug, and then pour the remaining two gallons into the 3-gallon jug. Fill the 5-gallon jug, and then pour into the 3-gallon jug until it is full, leaving 4 gallons in the 5-gallon jug.
40 grams
There are several ways you could determine the capacity of a milk jug: 1: Fill the milk jug with water and then transfer the water to a graduated measuring jug 2: take a bottle of known volume such as a soda bottle. Fill the soda bottle and transfer its contents to the milk jug to get its approximate capacity 3: weigh the empty milk jug and make a note of the weight. Then, fill the milk jug with water. 1 cubic cm of water weighs 1 gram. Deduct the weight of the empty jug from the weight of the full jug to give the weight of the water inside. If, for example, the water weighs approximately 1000 grams then you have a 1 litre milk jug
probably about 2-3 quarts, what i do is drain oil into a pan then keep an empty milk jug around , dump oil into milk jug then you know how much came out. that's how much to put in then check level with dipstick or sightglass whichever you have, then add accordingly
Fill the seven litre jug. Empty into 9l jug. Refill 7 litre jug and empty into 9l jug. 7l jug now contains 5l, whilst 9l jug is full. Empty 9l jug. Pour contents of 7l jug into 9l jug. Refill 7l jug and empty into 9l jug. The remainder in the 7l jug will be 3 litres
You can get a 1 quart jug of milk or a 2 quart jug of milk
There is 1 gallon of milk in the typical milk jug.
well, you go to some supermarket and ask the woman to give some milk from the jug.
one gallon. (8 pounds)
A half gallon jug can hold about $25.00 in pennies. (:
If A = 1.75 pint jug, and B = 1 pint jug 1) Fill 1.75 pint jug [then afterwards A = 1.75 B = 0] 2) From it pour 1 pint into the other jug [A = 0.75 B = 1.00] 3) Empty 1 pint jug, and into it pour the 0.75 pints [A = 0 B = 0.75] 4) Fill 1.75 pint jug again [A = 1.75 B = 0.75] 5) Pour enough (0.25 pint) from it to fill the 1 pint jug [A = 1.50 B = 1.00] 6) Finally, empty the 1 pint jug, and from the remaining 1.5 pints in the 1.75 pint jug, pour 1 pint of it into the 1 pint jug [A = 0.5 B = 1.00] So in six stages there will be half a pint in the 1.75 pint jug!
Assuming the jug was empty, it would require 1 litre. If the jug contained any amount of water, the requirement would be 1 litre minus however much was in the jug already.
2000.00