How much will it cost to fill my tank calculator

The following gas cost calculator will help you determine three things: annual gas cost, monthly gas cost, and miles per gallon (MPG)


Daily mileage:

Cost per gallon(in USD):

Gas tank size(in gallons)

Days between fillups

                                       

Guidelines to follow when using the gas cost calculator

When entering numbers, do not use a slash: "/" or "\"

Daily mileage: It is the number of miles you drive your car daily. Just enter an estimate.

Cost per gallon: It is what you pay at the gas pump to put gas in your car.

Gas tank size: How many gallons of gas can your tank hold when it is full?

Days between fillups: How often do you fill your tank? Is it every 2 days, 3 days, 4 days.....? I fill mine every 6 days.

Take a look at the figure below to see an example of how to enter number.

How much will it cost to fill my tank calculator

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  • How much will it cost to fill my tank calculator

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    How much will it cost to fill my tank calculator

    How much will it cost to fill my tank calculator

    Cheapest Fuel Prices. Travelling cost and fuel consumption calculators

    Travelling Cost Calculator

    Determine an estimated overall cost of fuel for your next vacation:

    Fuel Price Impact on Travelling Cost
    • litres/100 kilometres 
    • (per litre)
      


    Distances Between Major Australian Cities  Select a CitySelect DestinationDistance Travelled  
    Driving Time  

    This calculator will allow you to find the distance and driving time between two major Australian mainland cities.
    Select a starting point or destination by choosing from the two drop-down lists City and Destination.
    The results Distance Travelled are updated whenever you make a change to the selection in the drop-down lists.
    Note: Hobart is located in Tasmania and has been included only as a guide to the relative distance from the mainland cities.


    Traffic hazards encountered during the 19th century

    Speeding Vehicles in Melbourne in the year of 1875
    " ..police regulation forbids these.... a regulation, as might be expected, not infrequently disregarded. We were told, however, in all gravity by a citizen of Melbourne, that when the municipal treasury happens to be low, policemen are stationed at the crossings until a sufficient number of offenders have been caught, carried off to the police office, and fined to bring the funds up to the required level. "   Melbourne 1875  Note this article refers to a Horse driven carriage
    Source:  What we saw in Australia. 1875  by Rosamond and Florence Davenport Hill

    Hoons in Brisbane in the year of 1876
    " .... the larrikin horsemen who gallop wildly round corners of streets and across the main thoroughfares, utterly reckless of who or what may be passing.  "
    Source:  The Brisbane Courier   Thursday 30 November 1876

    Careless Driving 1876
    " Another class of men whose carelessness is crime are the drivers of heavy vehicles - draymen, cabmen, and omnibusmen included - who monopolise the entire road, pull across to the wrong side without warning, and enjoy the confusion, and oftentimes collisions, which naturally ensue to people coming behind.
    Source:  The Brisbane Courier   Thursday 30 November 1876

    Speeding Taxi cabs in Sydney in the year of 1878
    " Australian cabmen drive at a rattling pace, oftener over than under the regulation, six miles an hour."
    Note this article refers to a hansom cab in 1878
    Source:  Our Australian Cousins by James Inglis:     MacMillan and Co.London 1880

    BICYCLING AND PEDESTRIANS. Saturday 26 December 1896
    TO THE EDITOR.
    Sir.-As the number of cyclists seems to be increasing, I think the time has arrived when some regulations should be issued by the authorities limiting the speed of riders on the highroads and main streets, and otherwise providing against accidents to pedestrians.

    An eye-witness vouches for the following instance of reckless riding :
    On Saturday last, about 1 pm., on Wickharm street. near the intersection of Brookes street, a lady was exchanging from one omnibus to another, and in doing so a bicycle collided with her, grazing her arm.
    No bell was sounded by the rider, or other notice given of his approach, and he rode off without waiting to see the result of his clumsiness, remarking, in reply to the lady's remonstrances, that she ought to have got out of his way. This remark was probably the outcome of ignorance or impudence, or both combined, and as such is unworthy of notice.

    But if the accident had happened to an infirm or deaf person, or to a child, the result might have been very serious. There was abundance of room for the cyclist to have passed outside either omnibus, but he preferred to keep up his scorching pace, and to pass between the vehicles at anybody's risk, probably under the impression that the pedestrian had not the greater right to the road.
    On this latter point expert opinion would be gratefully received.
    -I am. sir. &c,
    PATERFAMTILLAS.
    The Brisbane Courier  Saturday 26 December 1896

    ADVICE TO CYCLISTS. Wednesday 5 November 1902
    To the Editor.
    Sir-Mr. Ayliffe's advice to cyclists is good and well timed.
    There is certainly too much fast and reckless riding, but there is another side to the question, and that is, that many drivers of vehicles are not nearly as careful in avoiding cyclists and giving them room as they should be.

    They have a "set" on cyclists, and take pleasure in running them off the road, and even into the gutter, whenever they get the chance.
    Only the other day I was riding along my proper side of the road, when the driver of a vehicle deliberately pulled across from the other side of the road, at a good trot, right in front of me, causing me to run into the gutter. He. saw me coming, and could see I was trying to avoid him, and that I had not time to pull up.
    The smile on his face told its own tale, and being a J.P. I had good mind to take his name and lay an information. It would do some drivers good to show them that cyclists have as much right on the road as they, and to make an example of them.
    -I am,
    &C  CYCLIST. The Advertiser (Adelaide, S. Aust. : 1902)
    Wednesday 5 November 1902


    How much will it cost to fill my tank calculator
    Flinders Street Railway Station circa 1927 Melbourne Australia

    Crowded Trains. 1881.
    Sir,-About the traffic management of the Victorian railways, I recently heard a shrewd practical man of business, well known in Melbourne, remark-
    "They have not the experience out here ; what they want is to import a man from Clapham, or Waterloo, where there is a perfect network of rails, and where trains are in and out unceasingly. Such a man they could easily get for seven or eight hundred a-year, and perhaps less.. He would very soon find out what's the matter."
    Is not that the real remedy for unpunctual starting, overcrowded, slow trains, arriving just too late to be in time to continue one's journey by another train, and for all the anathematising which follows the vexation which has become too common of late?
    I think so -
    July15.
    -Yours, &c,
    HURRY UP.
    Source:  The Argus (Melbourne, Vic.), Monday 18 July 1881

    Crowded Trains. 2009.
    We should just get used to crowded trains.
    Department of Transport chief Jim Betts said Melbourne was becoming more like London, Paris and Tokyo, where overcrowding was a fact of life. "I'm not saying that's a good thing. I'm not celebrating it. But welcome to the Western world," he said. "This is what happens when you have a city of four million people."
    Source:  Herald Sun Newspaper (Melbourne, Vic.)   May 19, 2009

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     How to use this Calculator
    Fill tank until it is completely full.
    Set your trip odometer counter to zero or note the odometer reading.
    The next time you fill up until the tank is completely full.
    Make a note of how many litres needed to fill the tank.
    Make a note of the odometer trip reading.
    Enter these last two values into the calculator.

    How do you calculate how much it will cost to fill my tank?

    How to calculate fuel cost? To calculate the fuel cost we use one of the following formulas: Fuel cost = (Distance / Consumption) × Cost per gallon. Fuel cost = (Distance / 100 × Consumption) × Cost per gallon.

    How do I calculate my full tank?

    Litres per 100km (l/100km) You will need the number of litres it took to fill your tank since the last time you filled it, and the number of kilometres you traveled in between fills. The calculation is: litres / distance * 100 = l/100km. For example: 57 litres / 635 km * 100 = 8.98l/100km.

    How do you calculate gas in a tank?

    If you're curious about your fuel tank capacity, here is a simple formula to determine the size of your gas tank in gallons. Simply multiply the length, width, and height (L x W x H) of the gas tank, then divide the total by 231. 231 is the number of cubic inches in one gallon of gasoline.

    How do you calculate fuel?

    How is Fuel Consumption Calculated?.
    Calculation. (Litres used X 100) ÷ km travelled = Litres per 100km..
    The data you need for this calculation is. Odometer at 1st fuel fill eg 1000km. Odometer ar 2nd fuel fill eg 1500km. ... .
    Example a car uses 65 litres to travel 500km. (65 X 100) ÷ 500 = 13 Litres/100km..