5 oz. flour = 0.1417 kg.
No. Corn Flour has a bulk density of 0.82 g/ml which means that 5g of corn flour is 6.1 ml and 5 ml is 4.1g.
For 5 pickles there is: total flour = T flour + Q flour → 3.25 kg = 2.10kg + Q flour → Q flour = 3.25 kg - 2.10 kg = 1.15 kg This is for 5 pickles, therefore for each pickle he uses 1/5 of this: for each pickle Q flour = 1.15 kg ÷ 5 = 0.23 kg
The answer depends on the bag! You can get flour in 1 kg, 2 kg, 5 kg, 10 kg and 25 kg.
Depends on 5 oz of what. ML is a size (volume) not a weight. Water, flour, cheese... 5 oz of each of those will be different volumes.
density = mass/volume density = (25 g)/(5 mL) = 5g/mL This is generally brought to kg/L units, in this case that is: 5 g/mL x (1 g/mL)/(1000 kg/L) = .005 kg/L or 5x10-3 kg/L
This is not a proper conversion. Milliliters (mL or ml) and liters (L) are measures of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
This is not a valid conversion. Milliliters (mL or ml) and liters (L) are measures of volume. Grams (g), kilograms (kg) and milligrams (mg) are measures of weight or mass.
Break this question down into what you know and what you need to know: They have 1kg plus 250g of flour. 1000g =1 kg 250g = 0.25kg So they have 1.25kg of flour. If they want to make 5 loaves they will need 2.5kg of flour. The total amount they need minus the amount they have is 2.5kg - 1.25kg = 1.25kg. So they need 1.25kg more flour if they wish to make 5 loaves.
The conversion from milliliters (ml) to kilograms (kg) depends on the substance being measured. The relationship between milliliters and kilograms is based on the density of the substance. To convert, you need to know the density of the substance and use the formula: volume (in ml) x density (in kg/ml) = mass (in kg).
5
Yes, 500ml of water has a mass of 500g. The density of water is approximately 1g/ml, so 500ml of water would weigh 500g.