I'm using 4 drops per day. My pharmacy used to send me 1 10 ml bottle for 30 days, so it's 120 drops per bottle. Recently they started sending me the same 10 ml bottle for 40 days. I asked why, the pharmacist told me that the manufacturer changed specifications from 120 to 160 drops per bottle. So it's definitely NOT 200 drops like others say. The question is how can the same bottle now contain 160 drops instead of 120? Besides it doesn't even last 30 days in my experience. I'm considering switching to different medication to avoid worrying about running out of it every time.
This depends on the size of the dropper. The volume rating for the dropper should be in gtt / mL.
200
200
In college chem when titrating we were told to take 10 drops per mL, thus there would be 10,000 drops per liter. Other texts cite 10, 15, 20, even up to 60 drops per milliliter when dealing with intravenous drip calculations in medicine - so, depending on what source you use, that could mean up to sixty thousand drops in that bottle.
The volume of the cup is: pi*r2*h = 3.14*6.52*10 = 1326.65 cm3 So the cup can contain 1326.65 drops of water.
Facts:120 drops = 5mL1 gallon = 3785 mL* 90840 Drops in 1 GallonIf a faucet dripped once a second how many gallons of water would it waste?It would waste 347 Gallons of water a year!Facts:1 year ~ 31,536,000 seconds24 drops in 1 mL1 gallon/3785 mL X (1 mL/24 drops) X (1 drop/ 1 s) X (31,536,000 s/ 1 year) = 347.1598415 gallons / year
=−2.05×10−18
about 8 to 10 dollars is how much it is worth depending on the condition.
1 ml is roughly equivalent to 20 drops of water
In college chem when titrating we were told to take 10 drops per mL, thus there would be 10,000 drops per liter. Other texts cite 10, 15, 20, even up to 60 drops per milliliter when dealing with intravenous drip calculations in medicine - so, depending on what source you use, that could mean up to sixty thousand drops in that bottle.
1.0mL = 20 drops
50*10 = 500 drops.
1 16-ounce bottle of food coloring divided by 100 drops equals about .16 oz. in 1 drop x 10 drops equals 1.6 ounces. So that means that 10 drops of food coloring is 1.6,"1 and six tenths," ounces. 1.6ounces
10 drops = 0.648 cc 1 gal = 3.785 liters do the math
About 10
There are approximately 240 drops in 10 ml. Therefore 2.5 ml contains about 60 drops.
you would use a dropper
10
30 drops 10 to the top 10 around sides and 10 on bottom then a slight squeeze to evenly distribute oil
10 drops in morning and 10 drops in evening