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.
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 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.
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.