US liquid quart to Deciliter

qt

1 qt

dl

9.4635294602919035845 dl

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Quick Reference Table (US liquid quart to Deciliter)

US liquid quart (qt)Deciliter (dl)
0.252.3658823650729758961
0.54.7317647301459517922
19.4635294602919035845
218.927058920583807169
437.8541178411676143379

About US liquid quart (qt)

The US liquid quart (qt) is a unit of volume equal to 2 US liquid pints or 32 US fluid ounces, approximately 946.4 milliliters. It is used for beverages, dairy products, soups, and motor oil in the United States. Motor oil is typically sold in 1-quart bottles. Soups, broths, and juices are commonly packaged in 32-oz (1-quart) cartons. The US liquid quart is smaller than the imperial quart (1,136.5 mL).

A standard carton of chicken broth is 32 fl oz (1 qt, ~946 mL). Motor oil is sold in 1-quart bottles.

About Deciliter (dl)

A deciliter (dL) is one tenth of a liter (0.1 L), equal to 100 milliliters. It is used in clinical laboratory medicine for reporting blood test results (blood glucose, haemoglobin, cholesterol in mg/dL or g/dL), in European nutrition labeling, and in Scandinavian cooking recipes. Despite its limited everyday use as a liquid measure, the deciliter is one of the most medically significant volume units — nearly every blood test result references it.

Blood glucose is reported in mg/dL. A small yoghurt pot or juice glass holds roughly 1–2 dL.


US liquid quart – Frequently Asked Questions

There are 4 US cups in one US liquid quart: 1 quart = 32 fl oz and 1 cup = 8 fl oz. The full chain: 2 cups = 1 pint, 2 pints = 1 quart, 4 quarts = 1 gallon.

One US liquid quart equals approximately 946.4 mL (just under one liter). One imperial quart equals approximately 1,136.5 mL.

Most car engines require 4–6 quarts of oil per oil change, making the quart a practical single-container size. In metric countries, motor oil is sold in 1-liter or 4-liter containers.

One US quart (946 mL) is about 5.7% smaller than one liter (1,000 mL). Substituting 1 L for 1 qt adds about 54 mL — usually negligible in large-batch cooking.

A US liquid quart is 946.4 mL; a US dry quart is 1,101.2 mL — about 16% larger. Dry quarts are used for grain, produce, and dry goods. The distinction matters in agricultural and commercial contexts.

Deciliter – Frequently Asked Questions

Deciliters are the standard reference volume for blood test results. Blood glucose is reported in mg/dL, haemoglobin in g/dL, and cholesterol in mg/dL. Normal fasting blood glucose is 70–99 mg/dL.

One deciliter (dL) equals 100 milliliters (mL). Since 1 dL = 0.1 L and 1 mL = 0.001 L, there are exactly 100 mL per dL.

Yes, in Scandinavia (Sweden, Norway, Denmark) recipes commonly list liquid ingredients in deciliters. 1 dL is roughly 6–7 tablespoons or just under half a US cup.

A normal fasting blood glucose is 70–99 mg/dL. Pre-diabetes is 100–125 mg/dL. Diabetes is diagnosed at ≥126 mg/dL on two separate tests. Post-meal levels should be below 140 mg/dL in non-diabetics.

One deciliter (100 mL) is roughly 0.42 US cups. Conversely, one US cup is about 2.4 dL. For Scandinavian recipes, 1 dL ≈ just under half a cup.

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