5,600 cubic inches.
With large diameters like that you will most probably need to insert a weld-on 12 inch - 10 inch reducer at the point where the reduction is required. The pipe and reducer perimeter edges should be bevelled, say 45 degrees, for good weld penetration especially if the pipe conveys fluid under pressure.
2,880 cubic feet.
150
480 barrels
0.1406 inches or 3.57 mm (USG).
It is thicker than 1/8th inch thick steel.
Every time! lol Seriously a 10-inch pipe is 5/4 of an 8-inch pipe
XXh in piping is a determination of the wall thickness of the pipe. XXh stands for double extra heavy (or double extra strong) under an old standard measuring system. It has the thickest pipe wall of any other. The actual thickness is dependent on the nominal pipe diameter. Present determination of wall thicknesses of pipes is called schedules. Schedule 10 pipe is the thinnest while schedule 160 is the thickest. Heavy pipe is slightly thicker than today's sch. 40 pipe, extra heavy slightly thicker than sch. 80 pipe, and double extra heavy is slightly thicker than today's sch. 160 pipe. XXh pipe is no longer in use commercially and has been replaced with schedule 160 pipe, XXh Brass or Bronze pipe is forged or molded from bronze, rather than Iron or steel. Some wall thicknesses of double extra strong pipes are: 1/2 inch nom. dia. = 0.294 inch thick 3/4 inch nom. dia. = 0.308 inch thick 1 inch nom. dia. = 0. 358 inch thick 1 1/4 inch nom. dia. = 0.382 inch thick 1 1/2 inch nom. dia. = 0.400 inch thick 2 inch nom. dia. = 0.436 inch thick
10
Depends on if the 10" is inner or outer diameter, and the length of the pipe.
5,600 cubic inches.
The gauge of the pipe is the wall thickness. It is easier to say Schedule 40 pipe than .180 inch wall thickness. This is the SCH 40 wall thickness for a standard 12" pipe and the actual gauge thickness will vary based on pipe size and material. The larger the Schedule number, the thicker the pipe wall thickness. Pipe Schedule is also expressed in Std., X-Stg., and XX-Stg. since some thicknesses are more common than others.
16 gauge pipe refers to the wall thickness of the pipe exclusive of its diameter.It is 0.064 inches thick, this is a steel wire gauge measurement.Pipes are typically sold by schedule numbers. A wall thickness of 0.064 inches would correspond to pipe schedule 40 for 1/8" diameter pipe (0.068"), schedule 10 for 1/4" and 3/8" pipe (0.065") and schedule 5 for pipe diameters 1/2" to 2" (0.065"). Over 2" diameter pipe, schedule 5 (the smallest wall thickness) is thicker than 16 gauge steel.
A pipe that is 10 inch would have the velocity of 2.75 feet. This is 2.75 feet with 722 GPM.
GAUGE , is one inch thick of steel or metal. So, take this one inch thick of steel sheet and cut it into 12 equal thickness sheets , you get a 12 gauge steel sheet. Similarly, take this one inch thick of steel sheet and cut it into 14 equal thickness sheets , you get a 14 gauge steel sheet. and so on . So, a 12 gauge steel sheet is thicker than 14 gauge , 14 is thicker than 16 , 16 is thicker than 18 and so on. Wrong!!! See my discussion on this...
It is: 1/10 of an inch