640 ounces
12 thirty packs! Since keg sizes are not standardized, the keg cannot be used as a standard unite of measure for liquid volumes. This size standard varies from country to country and brewery to brewery with many countries using the metric system rather than U.S. gallons. In the US, however, a "full keg" or "half barrel" contains 15.5 and therefore depending on the quality of the fill anywhere from 150-165 12 oz. beers. Doing the math, that means that 5 to 5.5 "30 packs of beer fill a keg."
1 pound equals 16 ounces 16 times 6 is 96.
1 pound (avdp) = 16 ounces 1.5 pounds = 24 ounces = 4 times 6 ounces
1/6
208 ounces
12 thirty packs! Since keg sizes are not standardized, the keg cannot be used as a standard unite of measure for liquid volumes. This size standard varies from country to country and brewery to brewery with many countries using the metric system rather than U.S. gallons. In the US, however, a "full keg" or "half barrel" contains 15.5 and therefore depending on the quality of the fill anywhere from 150-165 12 oz. beers. Doing the math, that means that 5 to 5.5 "30 packs of beer fill a keg."
By law, 156 pounds six ounces plus nothing minus 6 ounces for a 15.5 US gallon keg.
1 pound/6 ounces = 16 ounces/6 ounces = 8/3 times.
A standard US 1/2 barrel (the keg you are most familiar with) is 15.5 gallons, or 1984 ounces. US 1/4 bbl are 7.75 gallons - 1/6 bbl are 5 gallons or 5.16 gallons (sometimes differs)
1 cup=8 ounces, so 6 cups=48 ounces.
1 pint= 16 ounces and 1 cup = 8 ounces , AND 1 pint = 2 cups.
1 cup is 8 ounces. So 1.34 ounces is about 1/6 of a cup.
1 pound has 16 ounces so just multiply 16x4=64+6 ounces equals 70 ounces
1 pint= 16 ounces and 1 cup = 8 ounces , AND 1 pint = 2 cups.
1 pound equals 16 ounces 16 times 6 is 96.
1 pound (avdp) = 16 ounces 1.5 pounds = 24 ounces = 4 times 6 ounces
1/6