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It would have helped if you had provided the size of the pipe. 10' by 2 WHAT? 2 inches? 2 feet, yards, miles?
This pipe can hold up to 0.5 cubic foot or 3.7 gallons of water.
It is not possible to answer the question without knowing which of the two measures is the radius or diameter, and which is the length.
There are 40 quarts in 10 gallons.
A 10-inch x 300' pipe holds 1,224 gallons.
There need not be any water in the pipe.Assuming that it is a 10 inch diameter pipe, then its capacity is 4.08 US gallons.
0.255 gallons per foot of pipe. A 10 ft long pipe that size holds 2.55 gallons.
There need not be any water at all in the pipe. The capacity of the pipe is approx 3.4 Imperial gallons.
1.6 gallons of water.
Up to 1,795.2 gallons of water.
6.5 US gallons of water.
6.5 gallons, if it is full of water. (if this is a trick question, and the pipe is empty or full of dirt or something, then not 6.5 gallons)
40.8 gallons of water per 10 feet of length.
61.2 gallons for every 15 feet.
12,239.9 gallons of water per 3,000 feet.
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