Every time! lol
Seriously a 10-inch pipe is 5/4 of an 8-inch pipe
It is a quarter bigger, in diameter.
1/2 inch + 2*thickness of the pipe.
A 192 inch pipe is cut into two pieces. One piece is three times the length of the other. Find the length of the short piece
28.26 sq in 196 sq ft
1 and 1/2 gallons
5m - 1.2m - 2.4m = 1.4m The plumber has 1.4m of pipe left.
16
Volume of the pipe = 4.896 gallons
That depends on how long the pipe is.
The answer will depend on whether it is a 2 inch pipe or a 2 cm pipe or a 2 foot pipe or whatever.The answer will depend on whether it is a 2 inch pipe or a 2 cm pipe or a 2 foot pipe or whatever.The answer will depend on whether it is a 2 inch pipe or a 2 cm pipe or a 2 foot pipe or whatever.The answer will depend on whether it is a 2 inch pipe or a 2 cm pipe or a 2 foot pipe or whatever.
0.3672 gallon per foot of pipe.
The answer depends on the cross section of the pipe and its length.
5,600 cubic inches.
Three 0.50 inch diameter pipes will fit into one 1.50 inch diameter pipe (hypothetically). The 0.50 inch diameters stack on top of each other until you have 1.50 inches!
5.5 gallons per 15 feet of 3-inch pipe.
How many nick break specimens are required to qualify a WPS on 6 inch pipe with a .375 inch wall thickness?
You multiply the radius of the circle 0.5 (radius of a 1 inch pipe) by 3.14(pi) by the height of the pipe 12 inches which gives you 18.84ozs.
By calculating the areas of circles with diameters 6 and 4 and comparing those: pi3^2=pi9 pi2^2=pi4 pi9/pi4=9/4=2.25 So the 6 inch pipe holds 2.25 times as much as the 4 inch pipe.