If you can draw a line 1 inch long and divide it into 8 equal parts, then each of the segments would be an eighth of an inch long
It depends on the flow rate in the hose and that depends on the water pressure.
1 inch is equal to 2.54 centimetres. Therefore, three eighths of an inch is equal to 3/8 x 2.54 = 0.9525 centimetres.
The capacity of a 25 ft hose with a diameter of 3 inches is 1.23 cubic feet. That is the maximum volume of water in the hose: there need not be any!
End to end, you'd need 36 of them.
There need not be any water at all in the hose! The capacity of the hose is 3.41 cubic feet.
If you can draw a line 1 inch long and divide it into 8 equal parts, then each of the segments would be an eighth of an inch long
A standard fire hose is 50 feet long. A hose this length with a 2-inch radius grants about 4.36 cubic feet. This volume holds 32 gallons of water.
It depends on the flow rate in the hose and that depends on the water pressure.
One inch is equal to 2.54 centimetres. Three eighths of an inch is equal to 3/8 x 2.54 = 0.9525 centimetres.
A standard air compressor hose is on average about 25 to 50 feet in length. These hoses are typically 1/4 of an inch in width but sometimes 1/2 inch too.
1 inch is equal to 2.54 centimetres. Therefore, three eighths of an inch is equal to 3/8 x 2.54 = 0.9525 centimetres.
A 2.5 inch fire hose has a capacity of approximately 60 gallons per 100 ft. Therefore, a 50 ft hose would hold around 30 gallons of water.
The capacity of a 25 ft hose with a diameter of 3 inches is 1.23 cubic feet. That is the maximum volume of water in the hose: there need not be any!
"The average sprinkler will use in excess of 240 gallons of water per hour" also refer to http://www.libertylake.org/water_conservation.htm for watering guide. As a useful gauge: A garden hose with no nozzle attached, will spew out as much as 350 gallons per hour. So 240 sounds about right for a sprinkler system, keeping in mind that it will vary with your local water pressure and type of sprinkler system that you have. If your system has a damaged sprinkler head, you might as well be running that garden hose full blast. My sprinkler system uses 1,000 gallons in a three hour time cycle. I have six or seven zones. I suspect some of my heads are busted, since that sounds about like "garden hose figures." (333 gallons per hour)
That's kinda gonna depend on how long the hose is. Without doing any figuresor math at all, we're pretty sure that a one-foot-long piece of 2-1/2" hose willhold more water than a 100-foot-long piece.In fact, when we do some figures, we can tell you that it'll hold one gallon of waterin every 47.1 inch length of hose.
That the drain hose from under the left side of the cowling. It drains the pan under the cowl below the wipers.