Find the volume in cubic feet and multiply by 7.48
no
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.
There need no be any water at all! The capacity of the pipe is 8.11 litres approx.
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
Yes, it is actually one of the questions on a master plumbers exam
its just the volume which is l•w•h (lengthxwidthxhight
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
You need to know the radius (1/2 the inside diameter) and the length of the pipe. Then, you use this formula to calculate the volume:Pi (3.1416) x r2 x length
Depends on the pressure. What bar do you intend to run at?
Insufficient information, one needs to know the pressure of the water entering the pipe, the relative heights of both ends the pipe, the pressure of the water at the discharge of the pipe, the geometry of the pipe including the number and types of turns, and the pipe material or internal friction coefficient. Then you can calculate the flow.
The capacity of a 32mm diameter pipe having a length of 32.5 meters is: 26.138 liters.
about 17.7 liters if the pipe is 100% full. Volume of pipe = CA*Length Vol = (pi/4)*(dia.)2*(length) = 0.7854*(0.0225m2)*(1m) = 0.0177m3 1 m3 = 1000 liters, so the answer is 17.7 liters