volume = pir2h
pi = 3.1416
h = 100 feet
r = 1/2 X diameter
r = 1/2 X 3/4 inch / 12 inches/ft = 0.03125 square feet
volume = 3.1416 X (0.03125)2 X 100 = 0.3 cubic feet
A round pool with a 10-foot diameter and a 3-foot depth can hold up to 1,762 gallons of water.
Three inches is a quarter of a foot. Twenty five is a quarter of one hundred so the answer is twenty five hundredths of a foot.
704.5 gallons (approx).
Most output ranging from 560 to 600 btuh per foot, this is with 170 F water temps. I have no way to know your specifics from where I am.
6⅜″ (six and three eighths inches)
3"A quarter of a foot is .25 feet, or three (3) inches.
A three-inch diameter pipe one foot long holds 0.367 gallon.
A round pool with a 10-foot diameter and a 3-foot depth can hold up to 1,762 gallons of water.
Three inches is a quarter of a foot. Twenty five is a quarter of one hundred so the answer is twenty five hundredths of a foot.
Use the formula for volume on a cilinder that is 1' high and 3/4" in diameter and multiply by 4000 feet.
The volume of water in a 4-inch diameter, 1-foot section of pipe is 0.6528 gallons of water.
31.987 gallons per foot.
704.5 gallons (approx).
25 pounds
foot lockerebay
A 14 foot diameter tank has a volume of 154 cubic feet per foot of height and it takes 7.48 gallons per cubic foot7.48 * 154 = 1150 gallons per foot of height
Trinity test, 5 foot diameter sphereHiroshima, 4 foot diameter 10 foot lengthNagasaki, 5 foot diameter 10 foot length