Fill up a 5 gal bucket of water at full pressure and time it.
It depends upon the velocity of flow and thus how much dynamic pressure you have. The length and type of pipe/hose will also contribute to the amount of friction, further reducing the velocity, pressure and available flow at the outlet.
With no pressure (that being the P in PSI), it is next to impossible for any liquid, let alone gallons of liquid, to pass through piping at any length.
The standard formula to calculate flow(GPM - gallons per minute) from a CIRCULAR orifice is:29.7 * (the square root of the pressure) * (the square of the diameter of the flow orifice)EXAMPLE using 3/4" Pex Pipe(actual I.D. of 3/4 PEX Pipe is .677") and 40 PSI pressure:29.7 * 6.325(sq. root of 40) * .458(the square of the I.D. 3/4" pipe) =A GPM of 86.03Note: You also need to account for fittings in the loss calculations; while minimal several fitting will make a difference.
120 psi
Is the 1" inside or outside diameter?
300 gallons per minute
2.5 gallons per minute
Water flow rate half inch PVC pipe 65 psi?
0 gallons per minute will flow threw any pipe at 0 psi.
1200
Depends on what is flowing through the pipe and the temperature of the pipe.
Maximum PSI rating is on the outside rating of the pipe
10gpm
More, depending on how long you allow the flow to flow.
water or something else?ZERO as the 120 PSI exceeds the safe WOG pressure rating..GREAT trick question
Flow = Pressure / surface S = PI * ( Diameter / 2 ) ^ 2 now you can do the math... I can't tell with gallons, inch and psi.
We need to know what pipe material will be used.