Volume = Diameter x Pi x Height. Now you have the formula - the maths should be straight forward ! (Hint) the answer is between 100 & 110 !
543
The formula for calculating the volume of fluid to the fluid container in which it is located. For example. If the container is cylindrical. Area x height = volume of liquid
250pi/4
There are 12 cylindrical cans in a package. Each can has a height of 4.9 in. and a diameter of 2.5 in. What is the approximate total volume of the 12 cans?
The volume is 4.19 cm3
A cylindrical tower with a diameter of 10 feet and a height of 30 feet has a volume of: 2,360 cubic feet.
543
The formula for calculating the volume of fluid to the fluid container in which it is located. For example. If the container is cylindrical. Area x height = volume of liquid
250pi/4
There are 12 cylindrical cans in a package. Each can has a height of 4.9 in. and a diameter of 2.5 in. What is the approximate total volume of the 12 cans?
The volume is 4.19 cm3
A cylindrical paint can has a diameter of 12 centimeters and a height of 16 centimeters. Which isclosestto the volume of the paint can in cubic centimeters?
The easy way: Pour the water into a graduated container, like a graduated cylinder, and read the volume directly. The hard way: Calculate the volume of a regularly shaped container (cylindrical or rectangular). Pour the water into the container. Measure the height of the water in the container. Calculate the volume of the unfilled portion of the container. Subtract this volume from the total volume of the container.
pi * radius2 * height ( pie = 3.14) ( radius is half the diameter) ( the height is 60cm) multiply them all together you get.............................
Volume of water = (pi) x (Radius of the well)2 x (depth of the water)
The volume of a cylinder is volume=((Pi)*radius^2)*height. Therefore it is equal to 1^2*pi=pi times height(18) =18pi cm cubed
Capacity of the container = (pi) x (radius of the round end)2 x (height of the cylinder). That's the capacity of the container. If the volume of the fluid in it is really what you want, then you can use the same formula, but instead of the full height of the container, use only the height of the fluid column, i.e. what we professionals would technically refer to as the "depth".