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How many gollons to 160 liters? - Answers

ANSWER 1: The questioner means, no doubt, "gallons," not "gollons." Sometimes the misspellings around this place are genuinely astounding; though, that said, there are also a lot of questioners for whom English is a second language, and they're doing their best, so our patience with that is definitely in order. But now I digress. Sorry.One (1) liter (or sometimes spelled "litre") is equal to .264 US gallon, or .219 UK gallon (also called an "imprerial" gallon).Said conversely, one (1) US gallon is equal to 3.785 liters; and one (1) imprerial gallon is equal to 4.546 litres.Worthy of note, just for comparison's sake: One (1) US gallon is equal to .833 imperial gallons; and one (1) imperial gallon is equal to 1.2 US gallons.So, then, by doing simple math: 160 liters (or litres) is equal to 42.267 US gallons, or 35.195 imperial gallons.Just FYI: There is such a thing as a "dry" gallon, which is rarely used or referred to, but which is 268.8 cubic inches, which converts 4.4 liters. Therefore, 160 liters is equal to 36.36 dry gallons.For whatever it's worth, I do hate when homework questions get asked here. This was, I'm guessing, a homework question. If how I've answered it helped teach the questioner how to kinda' reason through this sort of thing in the future, then I suppose that that's good; but getting homework answers from a place like this, just generally, probably isn't, in my opinion, an ideal thing. But, again, that's just my opinion; and, that said, if learning nevertheless results, now matter how, then I suppose it's more okay than not, all things considered.



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How many gollons to 160 liters? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/other-math/How_many_gollons_to_160_liters

ANSWER 1: The questioner means, no doubt, "gallons," not "gollons." Sometimes the misspellings around this place are genuinely astounding; though, that said, there are also a lot of questioners for whom English is a second language, and they're doing their best, so our patience with that is definitely in order. But now I digress. Sorry.One (1) liter (or sometimes spelled "litre") is equal to .264 US gallon, or .219 UK gallon (also called an "imprerial" gallon).Said conversely, one (1) US gallon is equal to 3.785 liters; and one (1) imprerial gallon is equal to 4.546 litres.Worthy of note, just for comparison's sake: One (1) US gallon is equal to .833 imperial gallons; and one (1) imperial gallon is equal to 1.2 US gallons.So, then, by doing simple math: 160 liters (or litres) is equal to 42.267 US gallons, or 35.195 imperial gallons.Just FYI: There is such a thing as a "dry" gallon, which is rarely used or referred to, but which is 268.8 cubic inches, which converts 4.4 liters. Therefore, 160 liters is equal to 36.36 dry gallons.For whatever it's worth, I do hate when homework questions get asked here. This was, I'm guessing, a homework question. If how I've answered it helped teach the questioner how to kinda' reason through this sort of thing in the future, then I suppose that that's good; but getting homework answers from a place like this, just generally, probably isn't, in my opinion, an ideal thing. But, again, that's just my opinion; and, that said, if learning nevertheless results, now matter how, then I suppose it's more okay than not, all things considered.



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https://math.answers.com/other-math/How_many_gollons_to_160_liters

How many gollons to 160 liters? - Answers

ANSWER 1: The questioner means, no doubt, "gallons," not "gollons." Sometimes the misspellings around this place are genuinely astounding; though, that said, there are also a lot of questioners for whom English is a second language, and they're doing their best, so our patience with that is definitely in order. But now I digress. Sorry.One (1) liter (or sometimes spelled "litre") is equal to .264 US gallon, or .219 UK gallon (also called an "imprerial" gallon).Said conversely, one (1) US gallon is equal to 3.785 liters; and one (1) imprerial gallon is equal to 4.546 litres.Worthy of note, just for comparison's sake: One (1) US gallon is equal to .833 imperial gallons; and one (1) imperial gallon is equal to 1.2 US gallons.So, then, by doing simple math: 160 liters (or litres) is equal to 42.267 US gallons, or 35.195 imperial gallons.Just FYI: There is such a thing as a "dry" gallon, which is rarely used or referred to, but which is 268.8 cubic inches, which converts 4.4 liters. Therefore, 160 liters is equal to 36.36 dry gallons.For whatever it's worth, I do hate when homework questions get asked here. This was, I'm guessing, a homework question. If how I've answered it helped teach the questioner how to kinda' reason through this sort of thing in the future, then I suppose that that's good; but getting homework answers from a place like this, just generally, probably isn't, in my opinion, an ideal thing. But, again, that's just my opinion; and, that said, if learning nevertheless results, now matter how, then I suppose it's more okay than not, all things considered.

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      ANSWER 1: The questioner means, no doubt, "gallons," not "gollons." Sometimes the misspellings around this place are genuinely astounding; though, that said, there are also a lot of questioners for whom English is a second language, and they're doing their best, so our patience with that is definitely in order. But now I digress. Sorry.One (1) liter (or sometimes spelled "litre") is equal to .264 US gallon, or .219 UK gallon (also called an "imprerial" gallon).Said conversely, one (1) US gallon is equal to 3.785 liters; and one (1) imprerial gallon is equal to 4.546 litres.Worthy of note, just for comparison's sake: One (1) US gallon is equal to .833 imperial gallons; and one (1) imperial gallon is equal to 1.2 US gallons.So, then, by doing simple math: 160 liters (or litres) is equal to 42.267 US gallons, or 35.195 imperial gallons.Just FYI: There is such a thing as a "dry" gallon, which is rarely used or referred to, but which is 268.8 cubic inches, which converts 4.4 liters. Therefore, 160 liters is equal to 36.36 dry gallons.For whatever it's worth, I do hate when homework questions get asked here. This was, I'm guessing, a homework question. If how I've answered it helped teach the questioner how to kinda' reason through this sort of thing in the future, then I suppose that that's good; but getting homework answers from a place like this, just generally, probably isn't, in my opinion, an ideal thing. But, again, that's just my opinion; and, that said, if learning nevertheless results, now matter how, then I suppose it's more okay than not, all things considered.
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