Kiloliter to Imperial cup

kl

1 kl

imp cup

3,519.50797279999641148137 imp cup

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Quick Reference Table (Kiloliter to Imperial cup)

Kiloliter (kl)Imperial cup (imp cup)
0.1351.95079727999964114814
0.51,759.75398639999820574068
13,519.50797279999641148137
517,597.53986399998205740684
1035,195.07972799996411481368
50175,975.39863999982057406842

About Kiloliter (kl)

A kiloliter (kL) is 1,000 liters, exactly equal to one cubic meter (m³). It is used in water utility billing, industrial liquid storage, and large-scale liquid processing. Household water consumption is measured and billed in kiloliters by water utilities in Australia and South Africa. Industrial tanks, fuel storage, and tanker truck capacities are commonly expressed in kiloliters. One kiloliter of water has a mass of one metric tonne (1,000 kg).

An average Australian household uses about 200 kL of water per year. A standard road tanker truck holds 15–30 kL.

About Imperial cup (imp cup)

The imperial cup is a unit of volume equal to half an imperial pint, approximately 284.1 milliliters. It was historically used in British cooking recipes and is still found in older UK and Commonwealth cookbooks. The imperial cup is distinct from the US legal cup (240 mL) and the Australian metric cup (250 mL). Since the UK's adoption of metric measures, the imperial cup has largely fallen out of use, replaced by milliliters and the 250 mL metric cup.

Older British recipes (pre-1970s) may call for cups measured as imperial cups (~284 mL). A standard UK teacup holds about 1 imperial cup.


Kiloliter – Frequently Asked Questions

An average Australian household uses about 0.5–0.6 kL (500–600 liters) per day, or roughly 200 kL per year. A US household averages higher at about 1.1 kL/day (300 gallons). The biggest daily consumers are showers (60–80 L each), toilet flushes (6–12 L each), and washing machines (50–100 L per load). A leaking toilet can waste 0.5 kL per day unnoticed. Water-efficient homes in drought-prone regions like Cape Town have achieved under 0.2 kL/day per household.

One kiloliter of pure water weighs approximately 1,000 kg (one metric tonne) at standard conditions.

Australia adopted kiloliters for water billing as it aligns with metric measurement. The average Australian home uses 150–250 kL per year, making the kL a practical household-scale unit.

Road tanker trucks typically carry 15–34 kL of liquid, depending on road weight limits and the liquid's density. Milk tankers commonly carry 20–30 kL; petrol tankers 25–34 kL.

One kiloliter equals approximately 264.2 US liquid gallons. A typical backyard swimming pool holds 40–80 kL (10,000–20,000 US gallons).

Imperial cup – Frequently Asked Questions

One imperial cup equals approximately 284.1 mL — half an imperial pint (568 mL). This is larger than both the US legal cup (240 mL) and the Australian metric cup (250 mL).

The imperial cup is largely obsolete in modern UK cooking, which now uses metric measurements. It may appear in old British recipe books published before the 1970s metric changeover.

An imperial cup (284.1 mL) is about 18% larger than a US legal cup (240 mL). When using old British recipes in the US, 1 imperial cup ≈ 1.18 US cups — worth adjusting in baking.

Modern British recipes use metric measures: milliliters (mL) for liquids and grams (g) for solids. The BBC and major UK food publishers phased out cup measures in favor of grams through the 1970s–1990s.

There are 16 imperial cups in one imperial gallon (8 pints × 2 cups/pint = 16 cups).

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