Absolutely L/km makes sense.  Also, it is already in use this way.

 

John Altounji
One size does not fit all.
Social promotion ruined Education.

 <http://bit.do/tounj> http://bit.do/tounj

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Michael Payne
Sent: Monday, March 23, 2015 8:27 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:54661] Re: Adoption of the metric system in medicine

 

The benefit of having litres per hundred kilometres is that people use litres 
and kilometres. You can also multiply the L/100km by the price of fuel and 
figure out how much it cost per 100 km or per km.

 

Another benefit with my electric car is that it give me kWh/100km, this allows 
me to compare the cost of running the electric vehicle compared to the cost of 
an internal combustion engine. My cost of electricity is about 15 c/kWh 
including all taxes, etc., therefore at 15,2 kWh per 100 km it cost me about 
€2,28 per 100 km in electricity, whereas my other vehicle gets about 7 L/100 km 
at €1,395 per litre, it costs 7 x 1,359 or €9,765 for the same distance! A 
remarkable difference.

 

Mike Payne

 





On 23 Mar 2015, at 14:14, Pierre Abbat <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

On Monday, March 16, 2015 07:19:58 Martin Vlietstra wrote:



Another strange use of prefixes is motor car fuel consumption, usually
written in L/100 km.  If this is reduced to base units, one ends up with a
value of the order of 0.1 mm^2!


I think it should be expressed in L/Mm, or equivalently µL/m.

Pierre
-- 
gau do li'i co'e kei do

 

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