Hi!
I struggle with the american system of weight and/or volume. I look at fragrance oils from Aztek International (candlemaking.com). They, as all the other american sites, use oz and lb. Which, you might know, is like greek or swahili for us europeans.
Oz is fairly easy, I just type for example "8 oz to ml" in Google, and I get to know it is something called a US fluid ounce, and that 8 oz is 236,588237 ml.
But, bigger sizes of fragrance oils use lb, not ounces. So I do the same, type 1 lb to ml in Google. Error! That's not possible. I can convert it to water by using some calculator. But fragrance oils is not water.
So what to do? I write in Google again: 1 lb to kg, and get to know that 1 lb is 0,45359237 kilograms. I know that 1 liter of oil is about 910 grams. That means I can convert weight of oil to volume of oil by multiplying with 0,910.
So, 0,45359237 kilograms is the same as 453,59237 ml (millilitre). But that is water, not oil. I multiply with 0,910 and get 412,77 ml (rounded off). Okey, 1 lb is almost 413 ml.
But. When I convert lb to oz in Google, the picture is different. 1 lb is 16 ounces. So I start at scratch, and type in Google 16 oz to ml. Then I suddenly get 473 ml. A difference at 60 millilitre from the other method!
So now I doubt, is this oz measurement really fluid ounce, or is it another type of ounce? What is it? And what is a fluid ounce? Since everything is made as hard as possible in America, and then turned upside down a few times, maybe a fluid ounce is not even volume?
Since Google can convert oz to ml, I guess they do it more right than I do. So maybe the right way to find out how many millilitres an lb is, is to convert it first to oz, and from oz to ml? But if it is so, why isn't google so smart that they can convert directly from lb to ml?
Maybe I'm so used to our dead easy and logical systems here in Europe that I don't understand American systems that has no logical explanations. 16 ounces in an lb. Why isn't it 10 ounces per lb? Fahrenheit even worse. There is fluid ounces but no fluid lb. That was my first thought, it must be a fluid lb that I have to convert to ml. But no.
I seriously think of buying supplies from Aztek, or maybe another American site (I have not browsed them all, yet). The prices for fragrance oils is about half of european prices, or less. Some, like Aztek, have not too bad shipping prices from US to Norway either. The higher shipping prices from America will be eaten up by lower prices for the goods, depending on how cheap the suppliers are and what they charge in shipping. Some charge extreme shipping costs, like Essential Depot. I guess it comes down to which provider they use for their shipping. But I would anyway like to know how much fragrance oils I get, so I don't get a cold shower when opening the parcel. I got half of what I thought I had ordered, or something like that. And I would like to be able to compare between some European and American suppliers and/or products.
Another question. The oz you use for powders, like mica, is that by weight or volume? I find 1 oz to be 28,35 grams, is that correct?
If 1 oz is 28,35 grams, and 1 US fluid oz is 29,57 grams, something is not very logical somewhere. Here, 28 millilitres is exactly 28 grams of water. That makes sense.
I struggle with the american system of weight and/or volume. I look at fragrance oils from Aztek International (candlemaking.com). They, as all the other american sites, use oz and lb. Which, you might know, is like greek or swahili for us europeans.
Oz is fairly easy, I just type for example "8 oz to ml" in Google, and I get to know it is something called a US fluid ounce, and that 8 oz is 236,588237 ml.
But, bigger sizes of fragrance oils use lb, not ounces. So I do the same, type 1 lb to ml in Google. Error! That's not possible. I can convert it to water by using some calculator. But fragrance oils is not water.
So what to do? I write in Google again: 1 lb to kg, and get to know that 1 lb is 0,45359237 kilograms. I know that 1 liter of oil is about 910 grams. That means I can convert weight of oil to volume of oil by multiplying with 0,910.
So, 0,45359237 kilograms is the same as 453,59237 ml (millilitre). But that is water, not oil. I multiply with 0,910 and get 412,77 ml (rounded off). Okey, 1 lb is almost 413 ml.
But. When I convert lb to oz in Google, the picture is different. 1 lb is 16 ounces. So I start at scratch, and type in Google 16 oz to ml. Then I suddenly get 473 ml. A difference at 60 millilitre from the other method!
So now I doubt, is this oz measurement really fluid ounce, or is it another type of ounce? What is it? And what is a fluid ounce? Since everything is made as hard as possible in America, and then turned upside down a few times, maybe a fluid ounce is not even volume?
Since Google can convert oz to ml, I guess they do it more right than I do. So maybe the right way to find out how many millilitres an lb is, is to convert it first to oz, and from oz to ml? But if it is so, why isn't google so smart that they can convert directly from lb to ml?
Maybe I'm so used to our dead easy and logical systems here in Europe that I don't understand American systems that has no logical explanations. 16 ounces in an lb. Why isn't it 10 ounces per lb? Fahrenheit even worse. There is fluid ounces but no fluid lb. That was my first thought, it must be a fluid lb that I have to convert to ml. But no.
I seriously think of buying supplies from Aztek, or maybe another American site (I have not browsed them all, yet). The prices for fragrance oils is about half of european prices, or less. Some, like Aztek, have not too bad shipping prices from US to Norway either. The higher shipping prices from America will be eaten up by lower prices for the goods, depending on how cheap the suppliers are and what they charge in shipping. Some charge extreme shipping costs, like Essential Depot. I guess it comes down to which provider they use for their shipping. But I would anyway like to know how much fragrance oils I get, so I don't get a cold shower when opening the parcel. I got half of what I thought I had ordered, or something like that. And I would like to be able to compare between some European and American suppliers and/or products.
Another question. The oz you use for powders, like mica, is that by weight or volume? I find 1 oz to be 28,35 grams, is that correct?
If 1 oz is 28,35 grams, and 1 US fluid oz is 29,57 grams, something is not very logical somewhere. Here, 28 millilitres is exactly 28 grams of water. That makes sense.