That would depend on the wall thickness of the pipe. 54 inches is the outside diameter so subtract the pipe wall thickness (x2) adn you have the inside diameter.
-- Subtract the inside diameter from the outside diameter. -- Take half of the result. (since the outside diameter counts both walls of the pipe, and you want only one wall) Now you have the wall thickness. Common example. 1/2" OD, 3/8 " plastic tubing 1/2-3/8=1/8 and now divide by 2 and the wall thickness is 1/16"
If I remember correctly, the pipe size is the inside diameter, so it would depend on the thickness of the wall, as to what size it would fit into.
wall thickness of pipe is (OD - ID) /2
There is no exact formula to lay out pipe miters, but there is information that must be known to calculate the layout. This includes the diameter, wall thickness, angle, and offset.
The ID of a pipe (inner diameter) can be calculated by subtracting the pipe's wall thickness from its outside diameter. The formula is ID = OD - 2*WT, where ID is the inner diameter, OD is the outer diameter, and WT is the wall thickness of the pipe.
take the outside diameter and subtract the thickness twice.
take the outside diameter and subtract the thickness twice.
take the outside diameter and subtract the thickness twice.
That would depend on the wall thickness of the pipe. 54 inches is the outside diameter so subtract the pipe wall thickness (x2) adn you have the inside diameter.
=3.14 * (Diameter of pipe in Mtr. - wall thickness in Mtr. ) * Wall Thickness in Mtr. * 7850
It could be 65" (b wall - 5.5" wall thickness), or 66.5" (c wall - 6.25" wall thickness).
t = PxDxA/2E where, t = thickness P = pressure D = pipe Diameter A = factor of safety E = tensile strength of pipe
30-inch (inside diameter) RCP has a wall thickness of 2.75 inches. Therefore, the outside diameter of 30-inch RCP is 35.5 inches.
The wall thickness of 4" Sch 40 pipe is 0.237 inches.The outer diameter is 4.5 inches and the inner diameter is 4.026 inches.
The schedule value refers to the thickness of the wall of the pipe; the bigger the number (schedule) the bigger the wall thickness is of the pipe. The thickness is relative to the diameter of the tube/pipe an the application it is being used in.
Outer radius minus inner radius Subtract the inside diameter from the outside diameter, then divide the difference by 2.