4 m diameter x 12 m long = (Pi/4)*4*4*12 = 48*Pi cubic metres = 150.79645 cu.m.
(Almost 150.8 tonnes of water).
It is 2.2 meters long.
That depends on how long the pipe is.
The volume is 0.0001327 cubic meters.
The volume of a pipe that is 10mm diameter and 200 meters long is: 0.015708 m3
This pipe will hold 1,468.8 gallons of water.
The volume of water a pipe can hold can be calculated using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr^2h, where r is the radius and h is the height (or length) of the cylinder. In this case, the radius is half of the diameter, so r = 30/2 = 15 meters. Assuming the pipe is 1 meter long, the volume of water the pipe can hold is: V = π(15)^2(1) ≈ 706.86 cubic meters.
The liquid volume in a 6-inch pipe 1200 meters long is: 5,782.7 US gallons.
what exactly is a "30 pipe"? 240 what long? inches? feet? yards? meters? miles? centimeters? your question is unanswerable. not enough info.
A 16" by 1,960' pipe holds 20,471.7 gallons water.
There need not be any water at all in the pipe. The capacity of the pipe is approx 3.4 Imperial gallons.
146.9 gallons of water.
A 72-inch pipe 16 feet long holds up to 3,384.1 US gallons of water.