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You cannot calculate volume of surface area. If you meant 20m3, then the volume would be 20,000 litres.
diamater 1300 x Hight 1800. what is the volume in litres
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
When you calculate the volume of pipe(or cylinder, as I prefer calling it), you need to know 2 things; the height of the cylinder and the radius of the circle(base of the cylinder). Then you use this formula; hpr^2 (height * pi * radius)
That's a lot like asking "How do you convert length to inches ?" The 'litre'IS a unit of volume. When you measure or calculate the size of a volume,you can then use 'litres' to describe it, and to tell others about it.
You cannot calculate volume of surface area. If you meant 20m3, then the volume would be 20,000 litres.
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You simply measure its volume, in litres.
Number of Moles = concentration * volume (in litres)
Use the formula for a cylinder.
diamater 1300 x Hight 1800. what is the volume in litres
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
This cannot be done without knowing both the width and length of pipe.
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
When you calculate the volume of pipe(or cylinder, as I prefer calling it), you need to know 2 things; the height of the cylinder and the radius of the circle(base of the cylinder). Then you use this formula; hpr^2 (height * pi * radius)
Find the volume in cubic feet and multiply by 7.48
This is dependent on the internal diameter of the pipe. Your answer is the volume of a circle multiplied by its length (the volume of a cylinder) volume = (PI*RadiusSquared)*height so a pipe 1 metre long with an internal radius of 4cm volume = (3.142*16)*100 =5027.2 millilitres 5027.2/1000= 5.0272 litres