First, if you want someone else to help you, then you have to be better at
asking the question.
-- A "circular" tank has no volume. A "spherical" tank probably has.
-- If the top or bottom of the tank is circular, that still doesn't tell us the shape
of the sides, so we wouldn't know how to handle it.
-- "Sq ft" can not be a unit of volume. No matter what you do to a volume,
how you convert it, rationalize it, normalize it, or estimate it, you can never
tell a volume in square feet. It has to be "cubic" something, and that's a lot
different.
Here's a factoid concerning the volume of some round things. We have no way
to know whether this will help at all with the tank you're talking about:
If the tank is a sphere, and the radius of the sphere is ' R ' feet,
then the volume of the tank is
(4/3) (pi) R3 cubic feet
= roughly 4.1888 R3 cubic feet.
If the tank is a right circular cylinder, as may be implied by the question, the volume is the product of pi, the square of the radius (half the diameter) and the height. This number is about 4.5 X 103 cubic feet, to the justified number of significant digits.
21
the volume of the storage tank is 21,195 ft.3 (pi times radius2)times height.
A right circular cone with a base radius of 3 ft and a height of 9 ft has a volume of: 84.8 cubic feet.
The volume of a cylinder is (pi) R2 HR = the radius of the circular endH = the height (or length) of the cylinderVolume of the tank = (pi) (3)2 (6) = 54 pi = 169.646 cubic feet = 1,269 gallons . (rounded)
A "16 ft tank" does not tell us it's volume.
To find the volume of a cylindrical tank, you can use the formula ( V = \pi r^2 h ), where ( r ) is the radius and ( h ) is the height. The diameter is 4 ft, so the radius ( r ) is 2 ft. Substituting the values, ( V = 3.14 \times (2)^2 \times 6 = 3.14 \times 4 \times 6 = 75.36 \text{ ft}^3 ). Thus, the volume of the tank is 75.36 cubic feet.
The volume of a right circular cylinder with a diameter of 6.8 in and a height of 2 feet is: 871.6 cubic inches.
Volume = pi*r2*h = 1696.5 cubic feet (approx).
I don't know the height of the tank. If the tank is 20 ft high, then there is a volume of 25 barrels per ft.
In complete data. Any way let us assume the cross section of the tank is a sqaure of side 60 ft. Then its area would be 3600 ft2. So its volume would come to 3600 ft3
To calculate the number of barrels in a 10 x 12 tank, you first need to determine the tank's volume in gallons. Assuming the tank is rectangular and the dimensions are in feet, the volume would be 10 ft x 12 ft x height (in feet, which you need to provide). There are 42 gallons in a barrel, so once you have the total volume in gallons, divide that number by 42 to find the number of barrels. Please provide the height of the tank for an accurate calculation.