There are different types of Roundup Concentrate:
Roundup Concentrate Plus: Annual Weeds 3oz per gallon of water
Perennial Weeds-6oz per gallon of water
Roundup Super Concentrate- Annual Weeds 1.5oz per gallon of water
Perennial Weeds-2.5oz per gallon of water
Roundup Extended Control Concentrate- 6oz per gallon of water
Roundup Poison Ivy plus Tough Brush Killer Concentrate- 6oz per gallon of water
Roundup is the name of a herbicide used by farmers to kill weeds. A plant is said to be roundup ready if it is resistant to roundup, so that you can spray a field with roundup and it will kill the weeds but won't kill the roundup ready crop.
To get the best results from Roundup, it should be applied when the daytime temperatures are between 65-85 degress. Roundup will not give satisfactory results if the temperatures are below 50 degrees
dilution
As long as it is not used directly at the well it can do little harm.
headland
One liter (two pints) in a sprayer and five liters (one gallon) in a watering can are the dilution rates for Roundup concentrate in liters. The amount of the concentrate may vary from 20 milliliters (0.68 fluid ounces) for annual weeds (annual meadow-grass, chickweed, speedwell) and areas that will not be vegetated to 30 milliliters (1.01 fluid ounces) for conches, grasses and perennial broad-leaved weeds (bindweed, dandelions, docks, thistles) and 40 milliliters (1.35 fluid ounces) for bracken, brambles, nettles and scrub. Regardless of the concentrate amount or the garden tool, the dilution will treat only an area of 20 square meters (215.28 square feet).
1-1.5%
The dilution rate for liquid sevin concentrate for lawns is 1 Tablespoon per gallon of water which covers 94 square feet
what is dilution rate for glycos
To mix Roundup at the recommended rate for 3 gallons of water, you would typically use 2 ounces of Roundup concentrate. Be sure to check the label for specific instructions based on the type of vegetation you are targeting. Always wear protective clothing and follow safety guidelines when using herbicides.
When adding water to frozen orange juice concentrate, do not add too much, because excess dilution will result in an insipid flavor.
It will say on the label if this is okay. Some kinds come ready-to-use, while others are highly concentrated and require dilution.
The wording is important here. If it is a 2 *in* 5 dilution, then the scientist would need 200 ml of concentrate. The best way would be to take a graduated cylinder, put about 200 ml of solvent into the cylinder. Then put in the 200 ml of concentrate. Then add enough additional solvent to make a total of 500 ml. Mix, then pour it into a labeled and dated bottle, and screw on the lid. If it is a 2 *to* 5 dilution, then you need 2/7ths concentrate, and 5/7ths solvent. One seventh of 500 ml is about 71.43, so you would need 142.86 ml of concentrate, and fill the rest with solvent until the total is 500 ml.
you are doing 212 times as much land so you need 212 times as much roundup. 212*48 = 10176 oz. or 636 lb.
"Dilution rate RTU" refers to the amount of concentrated cleaning chemical that should be mixed with water to achieve the proper Ready-to-Use (RTU) solution for cleaning. It is typically expressed as a ratio, such as 1:32, which means 1 part of concentrated chemical is mixed with 32 parts of water. This ensures the solution is at the correct dilution for effective cleaning while minimizing waste and potential harm from using undiluted chemicals.
No, it actually increases it because of the dilution of the mixer
increasing the concentration increases the rate of the reaction