1 Determine which type of gallon you are converting from. Gallons can be imperial or US. Imperial gallons are used in the UK, and US gallons are used in the US. Since these two types of gallons are not the same, the conversion formula will be different depending on which type of gallon you are converting from. Convert liters per (100 kilometer) to miles per gallonl/100km to mpg (l:liter, 100km:100 kilometer, mpg-US:mile per gallon)Convert l/100km to mpga fuel consumption or fuel economy conversion tableCalculate fuel cost per mile and per kilometer of a gasoline or a diesel to convert liters per 100 kilometer to miles per gallon [l/100km to mpg]:mile per gallon = รท (liter per 100 kilometer)How many miles per gallon in a liter per 100 kilometer:If FEl/100km = 1 then FEmpg = mpgHow many miles per gallon in 17 liters per 100 kilometer:If FEl/100km = 17 then FEmpg = mpgNote: Liter per 100 kilometer is a metric unit of fuel consumption. Mile per gallon is an imperial or United States customary unit of fuel consumption. 1 L 100km to MPG = 282.48 MPG UK 1 L 100 km in MPG = 282.48 MPG UK 1 liter per 100 km to MPG = 282.48 UK MPG 1 liters per 100km to MPG is 235.21 US MPG and 282.48 imperial MPG. These results of 1 liter per 100 km to MPG have been rounded to two decimals, for increased precision use our converter at the top of this page. $\begingroup$ We have two vehicles A: old truck that does 17 mpg ( l/100km) B: old car that does 47 mpg ( l/100km) We are looking to replace one of these vehicles with a new one (of the same size) C: new truck 19 mpg ( D: new car 61 mpg ( So which vehicle should we replace to save fuel? The old truck or the old car to end up with. AD (old truck + new car) BC (new truck + old car) Read bellow once you have your anwser: The way I solved this: A: Old truck l/100km + D: new car l/100km = l/100km, B: New truck l/100km + C: old car l/100km = l/100km Combination BC uses less fuel.( less). Now using mpg: 17mpg + 61mpg = 78mpg 19mpg + 47mpg = 66mpg Making the combination AD a better choice. Why the exact opposite answer? What am I missing here? AugSB4,8213 gold badges26 silver badges41 bronze badges asked Feb 8, 2016 at 15:18 $\endgroup$ 0 $\begingroup$ For your first trial you have that AD needs more to drive 100km and, hence, BC is better. You make all the vehicles drive the same distance and, at the end, you sum up their fuel consumption (thus, you can sum their consumption rates). But in your second trial, since you are using mpg, each vehicle is driving a different distance, so you cannot sum the rates same way you do in the first case. If you assume that there is no distinction between the itineraries of the car and of the truck, then your first answer is the correct one. If you assume that you have to use the same amount of fuel in both vehicles (which seems to be a bit ankward), then your second answer is correct. answered Feb 8, 2016 at 15:48 AugSBAugSB4,8213 gold badges26 silver badges41 bronze badges $\endgroup$ 0 Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged problem-solving unit-of-measure or ask your own question. 33.46 mpg = 7.030 Liters/100 KM: 33.47 mpg = 7.028 Liters/100 KM: 33.48 mpg = 7.026 Liters/100 KM: 33.49 mpg = 7.023 Liters/100 KM: 33.5 mpg = 7.021 Liters/100 KM: 57.46 mpg = 4.094 Liters/100 KM: 57.47 mpg = 4.093 Liters/100 KM: 57.48 mpg = 4.092 Liters/100 KM: 57.49 mpg = 4.091 Liters/100 KM: 57.5 mpg = 4.091 Liters/100 KM: MPG = Liters/100 KM Convert between Miles per Gallon (US) and Liters per 100 Kilometers. 47 liters/100km: 48 liters/100km: 49 liters/100km: 50 liters/100km: 51 Online Mile per gallon to Kilometer per liter (Mpg to km/l) conversion calculator for Fuel Economy (Mileage) Unit conversions with tables and formulas 48 Mpg: 20. x146.
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  • 48 mpg to l 100km