Cubic centimeter to Imperial gallon

cm³

1 cm³

imp gal

0.00021996924829999987 imp gal

Conversion History

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1 cm³ (Cubic centimeter) → 0.00021996924829999987 imp gal (Imperial gallon)

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Quick Reference Table (Cubic centimeter to Imperial gallon)

Cubic centimeter (cm³)Imperial gallon (imp gal)
10.00021996924829999987
50.00109984624149999936
100.00219969248299999872
500.01099846241499999362
1000.02199692482999998725
5000.10998462414999993625
1,0000.21996924829999987249

About Cubic centimeter (cm³)

A cubic centimeter (cm³), also written as cc, is the volume of a cube with 1 cm sides, exactly equal to one milliliter (1 cm³ = 1 mL). It is used in medicine for drug dosing, in automotive engineering for engine displacement (a 125 cc scooter engine), and in everyday liquid measurement. The interchangeability of cm³ and mL means a 1 mL syringe and a 1 cc syringe are identical instruments. Engine displacement is expressed in cc for small engines and liters for larger ones (1,000 cc = 1 L).

A standard sugar cube is about 1 cm³. A 1 mL syringe holds exactly 1 cm³. A small motorcycle engine might displace 125 cc.

About Imperial gallon (imp gal)

The imperial gallon is a unit of volume defined as exactly 4.54609 liters, used in the United Kingdom, Canada, and some Commonwealth nations. It is approximately 20% larger than the US liquid gallon. Fuel economy in the UK is expressed in miles per imperial gallon. The imperial gallon divides into 8 imperial pints, each of 568 mL. The UK officially metricated fuel sales to liters in the 1980s–1990s, but miles per imperial gallon remains the legal unit for new car fuel economy labels.

UK car fuel economy figures are expressed in miles per imperial gallon. One imperial gallon equals 8 standard UK pints of beer.


Cubic centimeter – Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, 1 cubic centimeter (cm³) is exactly equal to 1 milliliter (mL). The two units are fully interchangeable. Medical syringes marked in mL and those marked in cc hold identical volumes.

In engines, cc stands for cubic centimeters and measures the total swept volume of all cylinders. A 125 cc engine has a piston displacement of 125 cm³ per cycle. Larger car engines are stated in liters: 1,000 cc = 1 L.

There are exactly 1,000 cubic centimeters in one liter. Since 1 cm³ = 1 mL, this also means 1,000 mL = 1 L — a fundamental metric relationship.

Historically, medical equipment used cubic centimeters before the milliliter became standard SI notation. Both are identical in volume. Most clinical guidelines now prefer mL, but cc persists in some specialties and syringe labeling.

A standard sugar cube, a fingertip, or a 1 mL syringe drawn full all represent roughly 1 cm³. A teaspoon holds approximately 5 cm³. A standard shot glass holds about 44 cm³.

Imperial gallon – Frequently Asked Questions

One imperial gallon is defined as exactly 4.54609 liters — approximately 20% more than the US liquid gallon (3.785 L).

The UK switched fuel sales to liters in the 1990s. However, miles per gallon (imperial) remains the legal unit for car fuel economy on new vehicle labels. Road speed is in mph and distances are in miles, so imperial gallons remain embedded in UK motoring.

UK MPG uses the imperial gallon (4.546 L); US MPG uses the US gallon (3.785 L). Multiply UK MPG by 0.832 to get US MPG. A car rated 40 UK MPG ≈ 33 US MPG.

There are exactly 8 imperial pints in one imperial gallon. Each imperial pint is 568 mL, compared to 473 mL for a US pint.

Canada officially metricated in the 1970s and fuel is sold in liters. However, some older Canadians and certain agricultural contexts still reference imperial gallons informally. Canadian and UK imperial gallons are identical (4.54609 L).

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