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A pipe does no water. Te capacity of the pipe with the given dimensions is approximately 98.2 US gallons. Whether or not the pipe holds any water is impossible to say.
Depends on the diameter of the pipe and the speed at which the water travels through it.
There is no obvious reason why there should be any water in the pipe. Furthermore, there are no units associated with the width of the pipe, so its volume cannot be calculated.
146.9 gallons of water.
That all depends on how long said 3" pipe is?
There need not be any water in the pipe! The volume of the pipe is 1044 Imperial gallons
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About 11.3 feet of 3" pipe can hold 5 gallons of water.
A pipe does no water. Te capacity of the pipe with the given dimensions is approximately 98.2 US gallons. Whether or not the pipe holds any water is impossible to say.
6'' pipe 1 meter long how mach the watter volume
Given long enough, all the water in the world.
Yes, as long as the water coming out of the pipe has a greater pressure than the water that is covering the pipe. If it is the other way around, the water covering the pipe will actually flow into the pipe. Think about it. It just makes sense.
A 1.5 inch (diameter) pipe that is 10 feet long can hold approximately 3.32 gallons of water. This calculation is based on the volume of a cylindrical pipe.
That depends on how long the pipe is.
The volume of the pipe is 0.2078 gallon per foot of length.I have no idea how much water might be in it.
Google volume of a cylinder. once you have the volume, plug in the density of water to get the mass.