Six.
The volume of the pipe is (pi) (R)2 (length) = 6,785.84 cubic inches = 29.376 gallons. We have no way of knowing how much of that volume may contain water at any particular moment.
You can fit six of them.
If the snake is six inches long and the hole is two inches in diameter, then yes. Otherwise, no.
Assuming the 6 inches refers to the inner diameter so that the radius is 3 inches, the capacity of the pipe is pi*r2*l = pi*32*12 = 339 cubic inches approx = 1.47 US gallons. There is, of course, no way of knowing how much water there is in the pipe except that it cannot be more than 1.47 US gal.
6"
6"
The volume of water in 1,500 feet of six-inch pipe is: 294.52 cubic feet or 2,203.2 US gallons.
In the USA, 15mm is half-inch, and 22mm is three-quarters inch. Lengths of pipe nipples in these sizes range from one and a quarter/one and a half, to six inches, in half-inch increments.
Most lumber yards should have it.
circumference = 2*pi*radius or pi*diameter
The volume of a 5,000-foot long pipe with a 6-inch diameter is: 981.75 cubic feet.
Try to take off with both feet and try to make your hand expand as high as you can
About 235 gallons of water.
The volume of a 6-inch pipe can be calculated using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr^2h, where r is the radius (half the diameter) and h is the height of the pipe. With a 6-inch diameter, the radius is 3 inches. Assuming a standard pipe length of 10 feet (120 inches), the volume of the pipe would be approximately 212.8 gallons.
1296 Tiles
3"