ATF to quiet lifters? Read pls!
Larry C Leung
l.leung at juno.com
Tue Apr 24 21:35:35 EDT 2001
Toooo, precise. And absolutely correct.
LL - NY a.k.a. the Physics Teacher
On Tue, 24 Apr 2001 18:36:01 -0400 "Doyt W. Echelberger"
<Doyt at nwonline.net> writes:
>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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