Volume of the cylinder = Area of the Base X Length
Area of the Base = Area of a Circle = Pi X r2
where Pi = 3.1416
r = radius of the pipe = 70mm = 0.07mtr
Therefore Volume of the Cylinder = 3.1416 x 0.0702 mtr x 1mtr
= 0.01539m3
If a ball has diameter of 140mm then it will make 280 complete turns in 123200mm.
The field of view's diameter is inversely proportional to magnification; thus, the 5.6mm diameter at 40x magnification would become 140mm at 1x magnification. Mathematically, Field of view diameter = FOV1 / Magnification1 = FOV2 / Magnification2.
140mm
There are 80 modern quarters to a pound. Each has a thickness of 1.75mm Each has a diameter of 24.3mm So a stack of 80 would form a cylindar 140mm tall with a radius of 12.15mm The volume of a cylindar is expressed as pi times the radius squared times the height, or : 3.14159 X 12.15 X 12.15 X 140 = 64,927.71177 cubic mm Dan
0.14m
140mm
To calculate the number of 140mm blocks per square meter, we first need to convert the dimensions to the same unit. Since 1 meter is equal to 1000mm, we can calculate the area of a square meter in square millimeters (1000mm x 1000mm). Next, we divide the area of a square meter by the area of a single 140mm block (140mm x 140mm) to determine how many blocks can fit in a square meter. This calculation would yield the number of 140mm blocks per square meter.
140mm
140mm /25.4 = 5.51 inches divide by 25.4 to convert mm to inch multiply by 25.4 to convert inch to mm
An mu 90 is 140mm wide. So it is a 140 tire.An mu 90 is 140mm wide. So it is a 140 tire.
140mm
140 mm = 5.51181 in