The radius is half of the 4 inch diameter. Therefore, the radius is 2 inches.
A "4-inch pipe" means it has a diameter of 4 inches, which makes the radius 2 inches. Did you ever see the formula pi*r^2 for area of circle? The answer is 4pi where pi=3.1416
There's no possible way to figure that out.
The answer depends on what the "36 inch" measures: inside circumference, radius, diameter?
The take-off for a standard radius 90 is one and one half the diameter of the pipe. Example: 6 inch 90 has a take- off of 9 inches. The take-off for short radius 90 would be the dia. of the pipe. Long radius 90 is 2 times the pipe diameter.
6 inch or 4 inch if it's a short radius
The weight of the pipe will depend on its volume, The volume in turn, will depend oninner radius or diameter,outer radius or diameter,length.Only one of these is given.
if you are saying the diameter is 2 inch then the radius is 1 inch.
You multiply the radius of the circle 0.5 (radius of a 1 inch pipe) by 3.14(pi) by the height of the pipe 12 inches which gives you 18.84ozs.
7
what is the radius? It depends on the the radius. Formula 3.14*radius squared*5=answer
A "4-inch pipe" means it has a diameter of 4 inches, which makes the radius 2 inches. Did you ever see the formula pi*r^2 for area of circle? The answer is 4pi where pi=3.1416
There's no possible way to figure that out.
Radius = diameter/2 so 16/2 = 8 inches.
The answer depends on what the "36 inch" measures: inside circumference, radius, diameter?
volume = pi r squared multiplied by the length you didnt specify wether 2 inch pipe was diameter or radius
circumference = 2*pi*radius or pi*diameter
The take-off for a standard radius 90 is one and one half the diameter of the pipe. Example: 6 inch 90 has a take- off of 9 inches. The take-off for short radius 90 would be the dia. of the pipe. Long radius 90 is 2 times the pipe diameter.