First of all you would find the volume of the cylinder. Then you would multiply that by the weight of air which is 1.2929 kg per cubic meter. Put the volume of the cylinder into meters, then multiply it by 1.2929. Then convert that into the unit you're looking for.
It can be done.
No, the intake stroke pulls fuel-air into the cylinder, the compression stroke squeezes (compresses) this mixture into a small volume.
The pressure increases and volume decreases. The air presses down.
The stroke volume in an air compressor is typically calculated using the equation: Stroke Volume = π/4 * Bore^2 * Stroke. Bore represents the diameter of the cylinder and Stroke represents the distance the piston travels in the cylinder during one cycle.
volume of cylinder pir2h
If the area of the base and the height of the cylinder and the cone are the same, then the volume of the cone will always be one third of the volume of the cylinder.
multiply the volume of the cylinder by 1/3. whatever you get is the volume of the cone
Volume of a cylinder = base area times height
Find the volume of the cylinder
The larger cylinder has a volume of 6225cc
If the volume of the cylinder is 5, then its volume is 5 and its radius doesn't matter.