I heard they do taste like chicken. But chicken fried in fish frying oil...Taste like chicken ...
How old was he, guessing he was up there?Saw that this morning.....
Saw that this morning.....
The difference is probably in the rounding of digits ...I agree with aspeck although I got 752.64 oz.
Well I got very similar answers. Does your method hold up for any percentage calculation? I remember chemistry class where we had to do such equations for so many solutions using the solute and solvent. And you couldn't just add in the amounts together because then the ration changes depending on the total volume you were talking about. And I thought there was a interesting formula we used to do it. But that was centuries ago...well a lot of decades anyways... lol Chemistry was not my best subject...electronics was!If my math is correct, and I am looking at this correctly, you are looking at 752.62 oz (5.88 gal) of gasoline to 15.36 oz of oil.
50/1 = 128x6/X
50/1=768/X
1X=768/50
X=15.36 oz of oil.
768-15.36=752.62 oz of gasoline or 5.8798437 gallons.
Don't forget the rate of evaporation and time consumed doing the mixing.Well I got very similar answers. Does your method hold up for any percentage calculation? I remember chemistry class where we had to do such equations for so many solutions using the solute and solvent. And you couldn't just add in the amounts together because then the ration changes depending on the total volume you were talking about. And I thought there was a interesting formula we used to do it. But that was centuries ago...well a lot of decades anyways... lol Chemistry was not my best subject...electronics was!
Honestly, this wasn't even for mixing fuel. I just used that scenario to explain what I was asking. But I guess evaporation could be figured into most any solution...IDK lolDon't forget the rate of evaporation and time consumed doing the mixing.