Volume of a cylinder = πr2h, where π is pi, r is radius, and h is height. Radius = 1/2diameter.
pi = 3.14
r = 1/2(4.5m) = 2.25m
h = 1m
V = 3.14 x (2.25m)2 x 1m = 15.9m3
Convert m3 to gallons.
1m3 = 264.172gallons
15.9m3 x 264.172gal/m3 = 4200gallons
1 cubic meter = about 220 (219.969157) Imperial gallons.
A circle with a diameter of one meter has an area of 0.785 square meters.
The diameter, rounded to the nearest meter, is: 26 meters(25.7831008 meters).
diameter = circumference/pi
The circumference of a 9.5-meter diameter circle is: 29.85 meters. (C = d x Pi)
A 350-meter section of 76-inch inside diameter pipe has a volume of: 270,500 US gallons of water.
The flow would be 2.5 with a meter with 12 inch diameter. This is with a flush at 5.0 FPS.
If "one meter" is the diameter, then the answer is one meter.
To convert the volume of a pipe in meters to Imperial gallons, you would need to know the cross-sectional area of the pipe as well as its length. Given the inside diameter (ID) of 102 mm, the radius would be 51 mm. Using the formula for the area of a circle (A = π * r^2) and the conversion factor of 1 cubic meter = 219.9692 Imperial gallons, you can calculate the volume and then convert it to Imperial gallons.
Yes. Buy a water meter and get it verified as to precision, then verify against the Badger reading. If you get another meter, try to get one that measures in the same format, for example: gallons - cubic feet - cubic meters etc or get a good conversion table. ONE CUBIC METER = 264.11458 gallons.
1 cubic meter = 264.172052 US gallons.
1 cubic meter = 219.969 Imperial liquid gallons
1 cubic meter is 264.172 US gallons.
There are 264.2 US gallons in one cubic meter.
Approx 110 gallons.
A kilogram cannot be compared to a meter. The kilogram measures mass and the meter measures length.
One cubic meter is 264.172 US gallons.