For medicine
A standard medicine dropper typically holds about 1 milliliter (mL) of liquid, but this can vary depending on the design. Some droppers may have a capacity of up to 3 mL. The amount it can hold is usually marked on the dropper or specified in its product details. Always check the specifications for the exact capacity of a specific dropper.
Medicine dropper water top top of a checker the opening of a electric plug
We don't know how many lines there are on the dropper all together. 1 cc is the same as 1 mL. So 1 cc is 1/3rd of the full 3-mL dropper.
An eye dropper typically holds between 0.5 to 1 milliliter (ml) of liquid. The exact capacity can vary depending on the design and purpose of the dropper. Standard eye droppers used for medications usually dispense drops that are approximately 0.05 to 0.1 ml each.
One milliliter (ml) is a small volume, equivalent to a cubic centimeter (cc). Common objects that approximate this volume include a standard medicine dropper or a small teaspoon, which holds about 5 ml but can easily dispense 1 ml. Additionally, a single cube of an ice tray can often hold around 1 ml of water. It's a volume typically used in cooking, medicine, and scientific measurements.
USE TO DROP SMALL LIQUID OBJECTS TO ESTIMATE THE mL OR GRAMS . THAT IS THE USE OF THE DROPPER ...............MABUHAY LAHAT ng LINHSIANS .............INHALE""""" TEACHER:OXYGEN kaba? STUDENT: ABA SYEMPRE
You're being flipping stoopid again - you don't mean the capacity of the dropper (wBTW - pr^2L) you mean the volume of a drop. The volume of a drop in technical terms is a drop.
It depends on the eye dropper, to find out how much your specific eyedropper holds count the number of times it takes to empty a 100ml beaker using it. Divide the amount of water in the beaker by the number of times it took to empty it and you will have a rough approximation of how many mL your eye dropper will hold. A standard small bottle with dropper - one suck which fills the dropper to about 2/3 of its height should be 1 ml.
Each dose would be 2.5 ml, which means each dose would require 80 drops (2.5 ml * 32 drops/ml).
A teaspoon holds 'about' 5 ml, so the spoon would need to be 1/5 full - but, for such a small amount of medicine it would be safer to use a pippette (dropper) where you would be able to measure 1 ml more accurately.
5 ml is about a teaspoon. 5 ml = 1.01442068 US teaspoons
Each dose from a 15 ml container would be 4 ml (15 ml / 60 doses). Given that 1 ml equals 32 drops, each dose would contain 128 drops (4 ml * 32 drops).