The volume of water in a 4-inch diameter, 1-foot section of pipe is 0.6528 gallons of water.
The volume of water in a 1 inch x 100 foot pipe is: 4.08 US gallons.
The volume of the pipe is 0.2078 gallon per foot of length.I have no idea how much water might be in it.
To calculate the volume of water in a pipe, first convert the diameter to feet (28 inches = 2.33 feet). Then use the formula for the volume of a cylinder (V = πr^2h) where r = radius (half the diameter) and h = height. For a 2.33-foot diameter pipe and 1 foot height, the volume is roughly 17.19 gallons of water per foot.
0.19635 cubic feet.
The volume for a 6-foot wide, 1000-foot long pipe is 211,500 US gallons.
4inch Schedule L Copper pipe weights 5.38 lbs/ft.
The amount of water a 4-inch pipe holds per foot can be calculated using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr²h. For a 4-inch diameter pipe, the radius is 2 inches (or 0.167 feet). Therefore, the volume per foot is approximately 0.35 cubic feet, which is equivalent to about 26.3 gallons of water.
A 100-foot pipe with an inside diameter of 12 inches has a maximum volume of about 78.54 gallons of water.
The volume of a cylinder is pi * r^2 * height. For a 10 foot pipe with a 1 foot internal diameter (1/2 foot radius), the volume is: ~ 3.1416 * (.5)^2 * 10 = 7.854 cu. ft. of water (or anything else)
The volume is 0.7854 cubic feet.
A 5-inch pipe will hold approximately 0.36 gallons of water per linear foot. This calculation is based on the formula for calculating the volume of a cylinder (V = πr^2h), where the radius (r) is half the diameter of the pipe (2.5 inches) and the height (h) is 1 foot.
To calculate the volume of water a 36-inch pipe can hold per foot, first find the cross-sectional area using the formula for the area of a circle, (A = \pi r^2). The radius of a 36-inch pipe is 18 inches (or 1.5 feet). Therefore, the area is approximately (A = \pi (1.5)^2 \approx 7.07) square feet. Since the volume per foot is the area times the length (1 foot), the pipe will hold approximately 7.07 cubic feet of water per foot.