A round swimming pool is a right circular cylinder, so you can use the formula pi times the radius squared times the height to calculate the volume.
There is NO way to calculate this without knowing how deep the pool is filled!
A 20 foot round pool has a radius of 3.2 feet. So the pool has a volume of pi*r2*h = 101.86 cubic ft approx.
Here's a good resource and the formula necessary to calculate water volume in a swimming poo... http://www.backyardcitypools.com/swimming-pools/Pool-Volume-Calculate.htm (may need to copy/paste link) Hope this helps.. Terry Duff
length(M) x width(M) x average depth(M) you will get pool volume in cubic meter. convert it in to gallons or any other unit
The circumference is 50.24 meters.
There is NO way to calculate this without knowing how deep the pool is filled!
You need three measurements, length, width, and depth, to calculate the volume of the pool
To calculate the volume of your pool assuming is the most common rectangular kind. multiply width X length X average depth X 7.5 to get the volume in gallons.
Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.Assuming the swimming pool is a rectangular block, just multiply length x width x height. If these measurements are in feet, the volume will be in cubic feet.If the swimming pool has parts that are deeper than others (it is common to have a shallow part, for children who don't swim well yet), calculate the volume for each part separately, then add the results.
It depends on the size of the swimming pool. First, figure out how big your cup is (the max volume it can hold) then how big your pool is (max volume of the pool). Divide the volume of the pool by the volume of the cup. That will be your answer. Ex: the cup's volume is 8 cm cubed and the pool's volume is 8000 cm cubed.dived 8000 cm3 by 8 cm3:8000/8 = 1000Therefore, the answer to this example is that there are 1000 cups of water in the swimming pool.
A 20 foot round pool has a radius of 3.2 feet. So the pool has a volume of pi*r2*h = 101.86 cubic ft approx.
You could calculate it by finding the volume of water in the pool (in cubic metres), the average depth of the pool (in metres) and the width of the pool (also in metres).Then, linear metres = volume/(average depth*width).However, rather than calculating the linear metres, it might be simpler to just measure the length of the pool.
Here's a good resource and the formula necessary to calculate water volume in a swimming poo... http://www.backyardcitypools.com/swimming-pools/Pool-Volume-Calculate.htm (may need to copy/paste link) Hope this helps.. Terry Duff
Sure, it could. If the pool is a 4 foot deep, 20 foot round pool. I'm sure there are a variety of other dimensions that would also match that pool volume.
Litres.
length(M) x width(M) x average depth(M) you will get pool volume in cubic meter. convert it in to gallons or any other unit
By measuring the length and breadth of the pool we can measure its area.