Yes, it is actually one of the questions on a master plumbers exam
You need to know the radius (1/2 the inside diameter) and the length of the pipe. Then, you use this formula to calculate the volume:Pi (3.1416) x r2 x length
Static pressure is .434 X height Example 10 ft x .434 4.34 PSI to prove take 2.31 PSI x 4.34 To find FORCE to need to calculate the diameter of the piping and the height and then the weight of the water inside the pipe
if u r talking about presuure drop then it can be easily calculate with the help of relation 4flv*v/2gd in that f is the friction factor which is different for vraious type of flow for that u have to search a good book of fluid mechanics, v is the velocity. length of pipe and d is diameter of pipe
you need more info than that. you will need to provide the length of the hose and the inside diameter of the hose to calculate the amount of water it will hold
measure the radius of the pipe. (half the diameter - the width of the pipe) then measure the length of the pipe. then use the formula pi (3.14) x radius2 x length. the answer is the volume in the pipe
Depends on the internal diameter, and the flow velocity. Velocity of water = Delta V Internal Radius= R RxRxV= Volume
no
It is as long as necessary. It can be any length. The diameter has to do with how big around it is, nothing to do with the length. Standard pipe length is 20 feet.
Calculate the (diameter of the pipe (D) divide by 2) squared X pi * length and this will give you the volume. eg Volume = (D/2)2 X Pi X Length. (or R2 X Pi X Length) (Use 3.14159265359 as an approximation for Pi.) In practice, 11/14 Times Diameter is used in lieu of (R2 X Pi) as a quick and dirty but near enough approximation.
You'll need the length of the pipe, because that's where the flow resistance is. At the outlet end, the pressure is atmospheric.
That depends on what information is provided. If you don't have any information, you may actually need to measure the speed of the water; or you may want to measure the flow (for example, in liters per second), and the pipe diameter, and then calculate the speed from that.
Diameter is a length measurement. Cubic inches is a volume measurement. Diameter cannot be measured in or converted to cubic inches.