The volume of a cylinder is its surface (a circle) times its height. This comes down to: (Pi x r2) x h.
Pi is about 3,14~, r is the radius of the circle and h is the height of the cylinder.
It is important to make sure that the values for radius and height are in the same type of unit (so centimeters or meters for example) to prevent calculation errors.
Example: A cylinder with a radius of 5 cm and a height of 10 cm would have a volume of (Pi x 10) x 10 = 314 cm3 (cubic centimeters).
volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height rearrange the formula to make the height the subject of the formula: height = volume/(pi*radius2) height = 48/(pi*22) = 3.819718634 centimeters
A cylinder can be made of almost any material and that material will then make up its volume.
A cone has 1/3 the volume of its cylinder. To find the volume multiply the area of the circular base (pi times radius squared) and multiply it by the height of the cone. That is the volume of the cylinder with the same dimensions. Divide this number by 3 to find the area of the cone. Use unit ratios to make sure your answer is in cubic centimeters.
A rectangle (rolled into a circular shape).
Make the height the subject of the fornula for the volume or surface area of the cylinder
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to make an accurate liquid volume
A model rocketship
gradulated cylinder
Need more info, such as what cylinder you are asking about, wheel cylinder, key lock cylinder, engine cylinder and what year, make and model vehicle.
No year, make, model, or engine size and you expect an answer?No year, make, model, or engine size and you expect an answer?
To read the volume of water in a graduated cylinder, make sure your eye is level with the meniscus (the curved surface of the water). Read the volume at the bottom of the meniscus to get an accurate measurement. Ensure the graduated cylinder is on a flat surface to prevent parallax errors.