600 bottles
Twelve. 750ml X 12 = 9000ml (1L = 1000ml)
five bottles. You'll also have at least 250ml left over to fill from a sixth bottle, and given that a 750ml wine bottle won't be completely full, you can estimate that actually about half (375ml) the sixth bottle can be poured into the 4l vat or container, given an average of 725ml in a 750m bottle (allowing for corks and margins of error.
2 x 750ml of wine is egual to 1.5ml of wine.
Forty 750 ml bottles of wine would serve 100 people two standard five ounce glasses of wine each.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the math questions now? Alright, let me break it down for you. So, 1 liter is about 1.33 standard wine bottles, which means 5 liters would be around 6.65 wine bottles. But since we can't have a fraction of a bottle, let's just round it up to 7 bottles. So, 5 liters is roughly equal to 7 standard 750ml wine bottles.
a magnum equals 2 bottles of wine, or 1.5 liters or 51 oz.
On average, there are 5 real-sized glasses of wine in a bottle. If each person has 2 glasses of wine, that's 140 glasses. Divide that by 5 and you get 28 standard sized 750ml bottles needed. You have options to get larger format bottles, such as magnums that are 1500ml, to cut down on the number of bottles.
750ml is the most common size for wine bottles, but some wines are also available in 1.5 liters. Other wines come in smaller bottles for sampling.
12
This struck me as funny. The quick answer: 2 The longer explanation: 750ml is 750 milli-liters. 1,000ml = 1 liter. So since 750ml plus 750ml would equal 1,500ml , that would also be 1.5 liters. Hope that helps.
The average bottle of wine comes in a 750ml bottle