There need not be any water at all in the hose! The capacity of the hose is 1.67 cubic feet.
1 Gallon
you need more info than that. you will need to provide the length of the hose and the inside diameter of the hose to calculate the amount of water it will hold
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!
38
Weight of 50ft section of 3 inch hose with water in it?
There need not be any water at all in the hose! The capacity of the hose is 1.67 cubic feet.
1.03 gallons
There need not be any water at all in the hose! The capacity of the hose is 3.41 cubic feet.
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.
1 Gallon
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.
you need more info than that. you will need to provide the length of the hose and the inside diameter of the hose to calculate the amount of water it will hold
Roughly 1 gallon for every 18 inches of hose.
Difficult to say. Hydraulic resistance is proportional to diameter as well as length and velocity. Water moving very slowly in a short length of either type of hose would have negligible resistance. The more likely answer you want is that high-velocity water in a garden hose would experience MUCH more resistance (friction loss) than that in any fire hose of larger diameter. The actual numbers will depend upon specific friction-loss factors, including the type and size of hose and the gallons per minute. For example, the friction loss coefficient in a 1.5-inch fire hose (24) is more than ten times what it would be in a 2.5-inch hose (2.0) and 100 times that of a 4-inch hose (0.2).
All else being equal, a 2-inch hose carries 4 times the volume as a 1-inch hose.
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.