Same way you always calculate volume. The material makes no difference the shape is what's important.
the volume of a steel sheet plate is < length *breath *height >
Length X Width X Depth = volume
Ignore the zinc content. Just calculate the volume of steel in the given type (e.g schedule 40), size and length of pipe and multiply by the density of that grade of steel.
To calculate the weight of a given amount of steel in the metric system you simply multiply the volume of steel in cubic meters times the SG of steel (typically 7.85 but it varies slightly depending on the type of steel). The answer will be in metric tonnes or MT.
volume of the billet * density of d material i.e for steel density is aprox 7.8*10^-6 . volume * 7.8*10^-6.
If you know the dimensions of the slab, assuming that the slab is solid and in the shape of a rectangle, box, or square, you can calculate the volume with the formula: LxWxH which is length times width times height. This will give you the volume of the slab in cubic units (meters, feet, inches, whatever). Depending on the type of steel, you will have a different density ratio which can be used to calculate the weight of the slab. The density of low grade steel is something on the order of: 7850 kg/m3 so you would multiply your volume by the density ratio to get kilograms. If you know the weight of the slab and the type of steel, you can calculate the volume by dividing the weight by the density ratio. I hope this helps, perhaps you could provide more details on the type of steel and the exact property of the slab that you need (volume, weight, density.
weight of all steel can be calculated by multiplying unit volume with density.
In engineering measurements, 1 cubic metre of steel weighs 7.85 metric tons that is 7850 kilograms. You can calculate the volume of 1 kilogram of steel from that. This will come to about 0.00013 cubic metre approximately.
Calculate the volume of one sweet. Calculate the volume of the jar and then divide the volume of the jar by the volume of a sweet.
how calculate steel in concrete
The steel has a density greater than water; but the ship does not. To calculate density, you divide mass by volume. This includes the mass - and the volume - of any air trapped inside the ship.
How do you calculate steel weight without using steel table book?