Volume = pi*r2*length
Volume = 53824*pi cubic inches
The volume of a cylinder with a radius of 10 inches and a length of 2.3 feet is 5.01 cubic feet.
A cylinder with a radius of 21 inches and a height of 98 inches has a volume of 135,773.35 cubic inches. This cylinder would have a volume of 587.763 US gallons.
Consider the volume of the pipe as the difference in the volume of two cylinders, one containing the whole pipe and the other the empty space inside. Use the formula for the volume of a cylinder : Pi*r*r*h. Find the volume of the first cylinder with the larger radius and subtract from it that of the cylinder with the smaller radius. The height (or length) is the same for both volume calculations. The result of subtracting these is the volume occupied by the pipe.
No, it rarely is.
The volume a cylinder with a radius of 4 inches and a height of 5 inches is: 251.3 cubic inches.
The volume of a cylinder with a radius of 10 inches and a length of 2.3 feet is 5.01 cubic feet.
A cylinder with a radius of 21 inches and a height of 98 inches has a volume of 135,773.35 cubic inches. This cylinder would have a volume of 587.763 US gallons.
-- Measure the radius of the pipe, in inches. -- Measure the length of the pipe in inches. -- The volume of the pipe is (pi) x (radius)2 x (length) cubic inches
Volume of a sphere: 4/3*pi*radius^3 in cubic units
Cubic inches is the total volume of all cylinders. If you wanted to know the cubic inches of a particular engine you would measure the diameter of the cylinder bore and the stroke of the crankshaft, then use your calculator to figure out the total volume. The formula for the area of a circle is pi times the radius squared. The formula for the volume of a cylinder is area of the circle times length (stroke) of the cylinder. Once you have the volume of the cylinder you can multiply that number by the number of cylinders for total volume (displacement).
Volume of a cylinder = (pi) (Radius)2 (Length) Volume = (pi) (2)2 (15) = 60 pi = 188.5 cubic inches = 0.816 gallon = 104.45 fluid ounces
A sphere with a radius of 3 inches has a volume of 113.1 cubic inches.
A sphere with a radius of 7 inches has a volume of 1,436.76 cubic inches.
Volume = pi*radius squared*height. radius = 6/2 V = pi r^2 h V = pi(3 inches)^2(8 inches) = 226 inches cubed
Consider the volume of the pipe as the difference in the volume of two cylinders, one containing the whole pipe and the other the empty space inside. Use the formula for the volume of a cylinder : Pi*r*r*h. Find the volume of the first cylinder with the larger radius and subtract from it that of the cylinder with the smaller radius. The height (or length) is the same for both volume calculations. The result of subtracting these is the volume occupied by the pipe.
No, it rarely is.
The volume a cylinder with a radius of 4 inches and a height of 5 inches is: 251.3 cubic inches.