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Guest
Guest
Does anyone know how many cc's there are to an ml?
Lovely\ said:Hi Mark,
This is a great conversion table / tool .........
http://www.endmemo.com/sconvert/millilitercc.php
So where does the specific gravity of a liquid and the relative density come in?\ said:Although the high class and super exact physicists might quibble about the finer points, for most mortals
millilitres/ml = cubic centimetres/cc = centimetres cubed/cm3 (sorry but I can't do the correct font thingy on my keyboard. You'll recognise it when you see it)
Also for water ml = cc = cm3 = grams/g. Thus 1000 ml water = 1 litre of water = 1kg water. Very important to realise that if you're hiking and carrying everything on your back
That's all part of the fun & interchangeability of the metric system
Times change, and there are fashions in science like everything else, so cc is considered a bit old fashioned now, and has mostly been replaced by ml or cm3; but cc s are most known as a measurement of engine capacity
Also with the metric system 1000 ml/cc/cm3 = one litre/1l
So my old Ford had an engine capacity that was strictly speaking 1297 cc, but was generally referred to as 1300cc or 1.3l
One. They are the same unit of volume given in different terms. I know Andy said so above, but the answer was getting lost in the noise, interesting though that was!\ said:Does anyone know how many cc's there are to an ml?
Right, so I should only fill my car up on really cold days - got it.\ said:Temperature and pressure will both affect the volume of a liquid, this is why is all data books things like density etc. are quoted at Standard Temperature and Pressure.
If you look on petrol pumps there is usually a disclaimer that the volume delivered may vary depending on atmospheric conditions and temperature.
Right then, that narrows my options a bit, but OK.\ said:Really cold fine days, when the atmospheric pressure is high as well as the temperature being low!
Cheers
Steve
Ah, now you are talking about liquid oxygen - totally different mate.\ said:Mark only wanted to know "cc's there are to an ml" He is building a plastic kit ........... and now we know what to look out for when we are fuelling a "Soyuz Rocket"![]()
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Gloom.......\ said:Ah, now you are talking about liquid oxygen - totally different mate.
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