well, the formula for working out volume of a cylinder is PiR^2
which means pie times the radius squared, that gets you one face then you times that by the length so the forumal is R
pR2xL where R is the radius and L is the length.
Or
Volume= Bh
B= the area of the bases
h= the height
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Calculate the volume of the outer cylinder as pi*r*r*h where pi = 3.14159, r = 195, and h = 3400. Calculate the volume of the inner cylinder with r = (195 -25) = 170. The difference between the two is the volume of MS (steel used). density = mass / volume mass = density * volume. weight = mass * gravity (= 9.8)
no
Well, sweetheart, calculating the volume of a pipe elbow involves a bit of geometry. You'll need to break down the elbow into simpler shapes like cylinders and spheres, then use the formulas to find their volumes. Add them all up and voila, you've got the volume of that tricky little elbow. Just make sure to double-check your math, we don't want any leaky surprises down the line.
One would need to know the pipe sizes, boiler and expansion tank capacity and total length of pipe etc to figure the system`s volume. So instead, drain it, look at the water meter reading, fill it, look at the meter again and subtract the first reading from the second.
The Volume of a pipeline would be Pi times the radius of the pipe squared (r^2) times the length of the pipe (l). Pi x r^2 x l