US liquid pint to Cubic decimeter
pt
dm³
Conversion History
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Quick Reference Table (US liquid pint to Cubic decimeter)
| US liquid pint (pt) | Cubic decimeter (dm³) |
|---|---|
| 0.5 | 0.23658823649999858084 |
| 1 | 0.47317647299999716168 |
| 2 | 0.94635294599999432336 |
| 4 | 1.89270589199998864672 |
| 8 | 3.78541178399997729344 |
About US liquid pint (pt)
The US liquid pint (pt) is a unit of volume equal to 16 US fluid ounces, approximately 473.2 milliliters. It is used for beverages, dairy products, and cooking in the United States. A US pint is smaller than the imperial pint (568 mL) used in the UK and Ireland — a difference that affects pub serving sizes. Ice cream is traditionally sold in US pint (473 mL) or half-pint containers. The US also has a dry pint (550.6 mL) for measuring dry goods, distinct from the liquid pint.
A US pint glass at a bar holds 16 fl oz (473 mL). A standard carton of blueberries or strawberries is sold by the pint.
About Cubic decimeter (dm³)
A cubic decimeter (dm³) is the volume of a cube with sides of 10 centimeters, exactly equal to one liter (1 dm³ = 1 L). This equivalence is exact and defined by the SI. The cubic decimeter appears in physics and chemistry textbooks as the formal SI expression of volume where liters are used in practice, and in engineering calculations requiring dimensional consistency. One dm³ of pure water at 4°C has a mass of exactly one kilogram.
A standard 1-liter water bottle contains exactly 1 dm³. A typical lunchbox has a volume of roughly 2–3 dm³.
US liquid pint – Frequently Asked Questions
How many ounces are in a pint?
A US liquid pint contains exactly 16 US fluid ounces (≈ 473 mL). A UK/imperial pint contains 20 imperial fluid ounces (≈ 568 mL). The UK pint is 20% larger — a significant difference when ordering beer in the UK vs the US.
Why does ice cream come in pints but milk comes in gallons?
It is about consumption rate and pricing psychology. A pint of premium ice cream (473 mL) is a single household's weekly treat — small enough to feel indulgent, large enough to share. Milk is consumed daily in quantity, so selling it by the gallon (3.785 L) keeps the per-unit cost low and reduces shopping trips. The ice cream pint also hides shrinkflation well: brands like Häagen-Dazs shrank from 16 oz to 14 oz while keeping the "pint" container shape. Milk has resisted downsizing because consumers are acutely aware of gallon pricing.
How many pints are in a gallon?
In both the US and imperial systems, there are 8 pints in one gallon. The number is the same, but both the pint and gallon are larger in the imperial system.
How many milliliters is a pint of beer?
A US pint of beer is 16 fl oz ≈ 473 mL. A UK pint is 20 fl oz ≈ 568 mL. In Canada, a pint legally means at least 568 mL, closer to the UK measure.
What is a dry pint?
A US dry pint is 550.6 mL, used for measuring dry goods like berries, grains, and produce. It is about 16% larger than the US liquid pint (473.2 mL). The dry pint survives mainly in agricultural and produce markets.
Cubic decimeter – Frequently Asked Questions
Is a cubic decimeter the same as a liter?
Yes, exactly. One cubic decimeter (dm³) is defined as equal to one liter (L). This is the foundational link between the cubic metric system and the liter-based system used in everyday measurement.
Why do textbooks use dm³ instead of liter?
In formal SI notation, volume is expressed in cubic meters or submultiples like dm³. The liter is accepted but technically non-SI. Chemistry texts use dm³ to maintain dimensional consistency, though liter and dm³ are completely interchangeable.
How many cubic decimeters are in a cubic meter?
There are 1,000 cubic decimeters in one cubic meter (m³), because 1 m = 10 dm and 10³ = 1,000. This also means 1 m³ = 1,000 liters.
What is the relationship between dm³ and cm³?
One cubic decimeter equals 1,000 cubic centimeters (cm³). Since 1 cm³ = 1 mL, it follows that 1 dm³ = 1 L = 1,000 mL — fully consistent within the metric system.
Where is the cubic decimeter used in practice?
The cubic decimeter appears primarily in scientific and educational contexts, particularly chemistry and physics where SI units are preferred. In everyday life, the liter is used instead — but they refer to the same volume.