Around 943 lbs. Water weighs 8.33 lbs/gal. 5 inch hose holds 1 gal per 1 foot of hose. So 8.33x100 foot is 833 lbs. Add that to the 110 lbs that the hose weighs empty and you have 943 lbs
That section of hose holds 25.5 gallons of water when it's full, which weighs about 213 pounds. To that, add the weight of the empty hose, which I don't know.
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If it's full of water, then the water in it weighs about 106.5 pounds. I have no way of knowing what the empty hose weighs by itself. Whatever it is, you'll need to add that to 106.5 pounds.
1.03 gallons
1 Gallon
A 100-foot hose with an inside diameter of five inches can hold 102 US gallons of water.
With couplings, 110 lbs
41/2
Depends on the hose, obviously different hoses weight different amounts.
Fire hose reels are much stronger than typical home-based hose reels people use to water their gardens and lawns. Typical heavy duty fire hose reels weigh anywhere from 25 to 35 pounds. In kilograms, the weight of typical reels are 11-15 kg.
Volume of a cylinder = (pi) x (radius)2 x (length)Radius = 0.5 inchLength = 50 x 12 = 600 inches231 cubic inches = 1 gallonVolume = (pi) x (0.5)2 x (600) = 150 pi = 471.24 cubic inches = 2.04 gallonsThat's the volume of the space inside the hose. We have no way to knowhow much water is in it. It could be empty, half full of mud, ants, etc.
The Pressure exerting against the stream (on the end of the Hose opening) is 14+ pounds per square inch in Air, and 64 pounds per square inch in water. So the water in the bucket exerts a greater "Opposing Pressure" against the hose opening. This reduces the effective water pressure as the water exits the hose. If you had a Deep enough Bucket, the flow out of the hose would potentially stop, when the pressures were equal and opposite.