ATF to quiet lifters? Read pls!
Doyt W. Echelberger
Doyt at nwonline.net
Tue Apr 24 19:36:01 EDT 2001
Unless you are a scientist, just think of quarts and liters as the same
amount. For most purposes in real life, they are the same. In the
laboratory, a liter is just a small amount larger than a quart. But when
you go to measure the difference, most of the time you can't show it.
Fluids stick to containers, a drop escapes, and you shrug and give up.
If you can find it, the liter is equivalent to 1.05671 quarts, and that is
the volume of exactly one kilogram of pure water at exactly 4 degrees
Centigrade and 760 mm pressure. At least, that is what it was in 1952, when
I looked it up in the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics, 34th Edition.
Doyt Echelberger
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
At 10:04 PM 4/24/2001 +0200, you wrote:
>Hi all!!
>
>I was just wondering if someone could tell me how much means "half a
>quart" in liters...
>I'm definitely going to try this before the next oil change that is
>scheduled for the end of this week...hope the weather will agree with my
>schedule...belgian weather really sucks, I won't adivse this kind of
>weather to anyone of you!!!
>
>
>Thanks for your answers,
>
>
>Mihnea
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