Want this question answered?
It depends on the cross sectional area of the pipe.
Depending on the length of the pipe, it could range from nearly none to billions of gallons!
2.75 Imperial gallons.
It depends on the length of the pipe.
measure the radius of the pipe. (half the diameter - the width of the pipe) then measure the length of the pipe. then use the formula pi (3.14) x radius2 x length. the answer is the volume in the pipe
It depends on how much each pipe can hold. And how long each pipe is.
much water per foot will a 5 inch pipe hold
A two inch pipe can hold 0.1632 gallons per foot. It takes slightly over 6 feet of two inch pipe to hold one gallon of water.
It depends on the cross sectional area of the pipe.
You need to know both length and circumference of the inside part of the pipe.
Depending on the length of the pipe, it could range from nearly none to billions of gallons!
The formula for this goes like this: radius of the pipe squared (32) x pi (3.1416) x length of pipe (12) = volume (amount of water). So 32 x 3.1416 x 12 = 339.2928 or about 339.3 cubic inches.
In the UK a 300mm (12" = 305mm) steel pipe with wall thickness of 6.35mm will hold 53.24 litres per metre
The volume is 31.809 cubic feet.
A 28mm round bin holds how much product
2.75 Imperial gallons.
That completely depends on the length of the pipe.