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The answer depends on the cylinder.
A cylinder with a radius of 6 feet and a height of 24 feet has a volume of 2,714.34 cubic feet.
this is not possible
An error in measuring the radius (or diameter) of the cylinder has a greater effect on the accuracy of the volume calculation than an error in measuring the cylinder's length, since the volume is proportional to the square of the radius.
Given a cuboid it is always possible to have a cylinder with the same volume.
The answer will depend on the quality of the graduation.
Bottles are made to carry the most amount of liquid in the smallest volume. The best shape would be a cuboid but these have sharp corners, (Health & Safety), therefore the smallest shape which can hold the second most volume is a cylinder.
A cylinder is a circle with an added dimension, height. Area of a circle is pi*r^2, and the volume of a cylinder is pi*r^2*h.
its millilitres
4,096 is.
Volume is a measurement of capacity. Dimension is a linear measurement.
You must know at least one other dimension, such as diameter or surface area before this can be answered.