1. Measure the base area (or radius and work out pi r²) 2. Multiply this by the height 3. There are 264.2 gallons in 1 cubic meter. So multiply by 264.2
If radius is 5 mm then diameter is 1 cm 100 cm = 1 meter 100*100*100 = 1,000,000 cubic cm Answer: 1,000,000 The above assumes that the marbles are all in straight lines in the x y and z directions, all stacked on top of each other. Round objects rarely do this and will instead sit in the valleys of those around it.
Pi x radius2 x height
First calculate cubic feet: 3.1417 x Radius² x Depth = cubic feetNext calculate gallons: Cubic ft x 7.47 = gallons
There are 0.004 gallons per cubic inch in a round horizontal tank. You just said per inch, but actually, you must calculate cubic inches in order to convert to gallons. Cubic inches is calculated by: volume=pir2h. pi=3.14159 r=radius h=height radius=1/2xdiameter
The volume of a 300mm diameter by 600mm deep cylinder is: 42,412,000 mm3
if tank hight is 7mtr and dia is 8mtrs how i will calculate in cubic meter
This question has already been answered in detail and the answer is 27.39133172 cubic meters.
round it by cubic meters
The volume of a rectangular prism with side lengths 15.8 m 24.5 m and 4.2 m, rounded to the nearest cubic meter, is 1626m3
The volume of a cylinder is 3.14*radius^2*height.
To convert cubic inches to cubic feet for a round tree, you would first calculate the volume of the tree in cubic inches using the formula for the volume of a cylinder (Ο * (radius)^2 * height). Then, divide the cubic inches by 1,728 (the number of cubic inches in a cubic foot) to get the volume in cubic feet.
164 cubic centimeters. You would round up to the largest next whole number.
49235.20
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In round figures, 1 meter = 3.281 feet 1 foot = 0.305 meter
A square meter is 100x100 which means there are 10000 sq cm in a sq meter. Your blocks are 450mmx450mm which means that they are 45cm x 45 cm 45x45=2025 10000/2025= 4.94 paving flags. However, you might want to calculate the amount of blocks needed for the entire area you're paving, not for each meter. Always remember to round up and leave yourself some extras, Keep in mind that you may need to leave some gap between the blocks, and that doing so may help you use fewer blocks. For example if you are paving an ally a meter wide, then leaving a gap of three centemeters at the sides of the ally and three centemeters betweed the blocks will mean you get away with using two blocks width and don't need to cut any blocks (which would be a pain in the neck).