It depends on the vehicle. Some cars get ten miles per gallon, some get fifty plus miles to the gallon.
There is a wide range of vehicles from small passenger cars to large trucks and buses. It would help if you narrowed it down.
28.6 x 15 = 429 miles.
That depends on the vehicle
It would depend on the MPG (miles per gallon) your vehicle gets and the price of gasoline in your area.
Depends on how many miles per gallon your vehicle can travel
the ammount of miles you can travel on one gallon of gasoline
A vehicle @ 13 liters per gallon (~0.29MPG) will travel about 6.55 miles on a tank of 22.5 gallons of fuel.
To convert liters to gallons, divide by 3.785. 76.5 liters is equal to 20.2 gallons. Multiply 20.2 gallons by 38 miles per gallon to get 767.6 miles. The car can travel approximately 767.6 miles on 76.5 liters of gasoline.
The distance a car can travel on 1 gallon of gas depends on various factors such as the vehicle's fuel efficiency (MPG) and driving conditions. On average, a car with a fuel efficiency of 25 miles per gallon (MPG) can travel 25 miles on 1 gallon of gas. However, this can vary significantly depending on the vehicle and driving habits.
there are 4.54 liters in a gallon, therefore 6.61 gallons. if the car travels 35 miles on one gallon it will travel 35 x 6.61=231.28miles
As near as I can recall and as near as I have been able to find on the net (which corroborates my memory) the average price of a gallon of gasoline in 1964 was about .27 cents a gallon. I bought gasoline for my first motorcycle a Honda 90 in 1964 in Tulsa, Oklahoma and it was 16 cents per gallon, and even less during gas wars that stations had alot. Minimum wage then was $1.25 per hour. The Honda got 174mpg I could pay for 15,000 miles of fuel then by working 13 hours at minimum wage when I was 14 years old. In May of 2008 one would need to work for 20 weeks at 40 hrs per week to buy 15,000 miles for a 15 mpg vehicle. In 1964 one needed to only work for 4 weeks to purchase the same amount of fuel for the 15mpg vehicle to travel 15,000 miles. There are only 52 weeks in a year, so one needs to work nearly half a year at minimum wage in May of 2008 to travel the same mileage that four weeks work purchased in 1964.