I'm assuming that "4 inch" is the inside diameter of your pipe.
Then its volume is roughly
-- 0.6528 gallon per foot
-- 1.9584 gallon per yard
-- 3.264 gallons per 5 feet
.
etc.
The volume of a 12 inch x 12 inch pipe is: 1,360 cubic inches
The volume of water that a length of 3/4 inch pipe can hold depends on its length. The internal diameter of a 3/4 inch pipe is approximately 0.824 inches. To calculate the volume, you can use the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr²h, where r is the radius (0.412 inches) and h is the length of the pipe in inches. For example, a 10-foot length (120 inches) of 3/4 inch pipe holds about 0.61 gallons of water.
Yes, a single 4-inch pipe can carry more volume than two 2-inch pipes. The cross-sectional area of a 4-inch pipe is significantly larger, allowing it to transport more fluid. Specifically, the area of a 4-inch pipe is approximately 12.57 square inches, while the combined area of two 2-inch pipes is about 6.28 square inches. Therefore, the 4-inch pipe will have a higher flow capacity.
52.3 cubic feet.
It depends on how long the pipe is. 4" diameter is just the 2 dimensional measurement, therefore you would not be able to determine the volume of that pipe.
The volume of water in a 4-inch diameter, 1-foot section of pipe is 0.6528 gallons of water.
The volume of this pipe is 261.8 cubic feet.
Volume would be 5.118 gallons of liquid.
The volume of a cylinder (pipe) is: pi*(r^2)h If a pipe has an 8 inch radius, then to find the volume you substitute: V = pi*(8^2)h If a pipe has a 4 inch radius, then to find the volume you substitue: V = pi*(4^2)h Thus, an eight inch pipe can carry 150.72*h more units cubed.
It is based on the flow area, which is proportional to the square of the diameter. 2 squared = 4. 4 squared = 16. So, the 4 inch pipe can take 16/4 = 4 times the volume of the 2 inch pipe. It might be less confusing if you had picked sizes other than 2 and 4. This is a rough calculation, since pipe inside diameters are not the same as nominal sizes, but close enough for most purposes.
The volume of a 12 inch x 12 inch pipe is: 1,360 cubic inches
The volume is 3,848 cubic inches per linear inch of 70-inch diameter pipe. In terms of liquid volume, this pipe would contain 16.66 gallons of liquid per linear inch.
The formula for volume of a liquid in the pipe is V=(pi/4)D2 (L)
The volume of water that a length of 3/4 inch pipe can hold depends on its length. The internal diameter of a 3/4 inch pipe is approximately 0.824 inches. To calculate the volume, you can use the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr²h, where r is the radius (0.412 inches) and h is the length of the pipe in inches. For example, a 10-foot length (120 inches) of 3/4 inch pipe holds about 0.61 gallons of water.
The volume of gas would be 598.7 cubic feet.
Yes, a single 4-inch pipe can carry more volume than two 2-inch pipes. The cross-sectional area of a 4-inch pipe is significantly larger, allowing it to transport more fluid. Specifically, the area of a 4-inch pipe is approximately 12.57 square inches, while the combined area of two 2-inch pipes is about 6.28 square inches. Therefore, the 4-inch pipe will have a higher flow capacity.
52.3 cubic feet.