The volume of a 300mm diameter by 600mm deep cylinder is: 42,412,000 mm3
30 cm
it is 72000000mm3
Assuming the 300 mm refers to the diameter, there are 9.
If you multiply the three numbers, you'll get the volume (in cubic millimeters). Assuming, of course, you were working with a rectangular block shape.
The volume of a 300mm diameter by 600mm deep cylinder is: 42,412,000 mm3
300mm
30 cm
it is 72000000mm3
Assuming the 300 mm refers to the diameter, there are 9.
70685.8mm2 (rounded to the nearest tenth) The area of a circle can be found by the formula: A = pi * radius2, or A = pi * (diameter/2)2 Thus, A = pi * (300mm/2)2 = (22500*pi) mm2, or approximately 70685.8mm2
Same as you would in inches 3.14159265 and PSI have to be known
v = area of base * h = pi*r^2 * h so v = pi*15mm^2 * 300mm which can be done on a calculator.
300mm is a very low head, you can't expect much flow through that pipe, but you can work it out from the mechanical energy balance equation.
The Canon EF 70 300mm lens has an image stabilizer, diffractive optics, and a 58 mm filter diameter. It has a minimum focusing distance of 1.5m with an object magnification of 1:4.
Mega meters? or mm which is milimeters 12.5 inches equals 12.5*2.4 = 30cm which = 300mm
If you multiply the three numbers, you'll get the volume (in cubic millimeters). Assuming, of course, you were working with a rectangular block shape.