Can you calculate the ID of a pipe when you have the OD to be 10.75" and the wall thickness to be 0.5"
Depends on what you know about it. If you have the outer diameter and you know the wall thickness, then ID = OD-2 x wall thickness
3 inch (inside diameter) pipe = 0.25 feet. Radius = 0.125 ft Cross section area = pi*(0.125 ft)2 = pi * 0.015625 ft2 . Multiply by 80 ft = pi * 1.25 cubic feet = 3.926990817 cubic feet x 7.480517578 (US gallons / cubic ft) = 29.37592384 US gallons.
First you must convert the pressure to Pascals and then multiply by the pipe's cross-sectional area and multiply the result b the square of the pipe's radius. Divide the result by the pipe's length, divide the answer by 0.08, multiply the result by 60, and then multiply that by 264.17 for the answer.
A 1-meter length of 102mm inside diameter pipe has a volume of: 1.797 cubic Imperial gallons or 2.159 US gallons.
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.
pressure loss and friction loss in a pipe can be reduced by 1) using smooth pipes 2) Using straight pipes, because the more bends a pipe has the more energy it will lose. 3)pumping downhill where possible.
it is useful to calculate branch in any degree:play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nasirstore.branch
assuming it's hollow. 10.68*ID*(OD-ID)
The ID is the inside diameter, you can use a tape measure and measure the open end of the pipe from inside edge to opposite inside edge
no
1/8 pipe schedule
To calculate square footage of a pipe you need to use the area formula of a circle, a=1/2bh. then find the circumference of the entire pipe.
By measuring the schedule diameter. That's the distance straight across the inside of the pipe from one side to the other, as opposed to the outside of the pipe to the other.
3 Inches.
Go to: http://www.techcalcs.com/calculators/pipeprop.php and use the calculator Otherwise calculate the volume displaced by the pipe and multiply by the density of the displaced water. This gives the bouyancy of the pipe
To calculate the surface area of a pipe fitting, you need to use the formula 3.14 x L x D. The L stands for the length of the pipe and the D is the diameter of the pipe.
Need to know how long the pipe is first.
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