The volume is 0.7854 cubic feet.
Formula: r2 x Pi x length (where r = radius and Pi = about 3.1416)Example: A 50-foot long pipe with an inside radius (1/2 the diameter) of three feet - 32 x 3.1416 x 50 = about 1,413.72 cubic feet of volume
The volume of this pipe is 28,510,000 mm3
-- Measure the radius of the pipe, in inches. -- Measure the length of the pipe in inches. -- The volume of the pipe is (pi) x (radius)2 x (length) cubic inches
This is dependent on the internal diameter of the pipe. Your answer is the volume of a circle multiplied by its length (the volume of a cylinder) volume = (PI*RadiusSquared)*height so a pipe 1 metre long with an internal radius of 4cm volume = (3.142*16)*100 =5027.2 millilitres 5027.2/1000= 5.0272 litres
Volume of a cylinder = (pi) (radius)2 (length)Volume = (pi) (0.25-ft)2 (20-ft) = 1.25 (pi) cubic feet = 3.927 cubic feet = 29.376 gallons (rounded)
The volume for a 6-foot wide, 1000-foot long pipe is 211,500 US gallons.
pi*r^2*h gives the volume of a foot long one inch pipe. Radius is 0.5 inches, height is 1 foot/12 inches. So the volume is 9.42 cubic inches. 9.42 (cubic inches) = 0.0407792208 US gallons
Formula: r2 x Pi x length (where r = radius and Pi = about 3.1416)Example: A 50-foot long pipe with an inside radius (1/2 the diameter) of three feet - 32 x 3.1416 x 50 = about 1,413.72 cubic feet of volume
The volume of this pipe is 28,510,000 mm3
Consider the volume of the pipe as the difference in the volume of two cylinders, one containing the whole pipe and the other the empty space inside. Use the formula for the volume of a cylinder : Pi*r*r*h. Find the volume of the first cylinder with the larger radius and subtract from it that of the cylinder with the smaller radius. The height (or length) is the same for both volume calculations. The result of subtracting these is the volume occupied by the pipe.
The volume of the interior of a pipe (or any circular cylinder) is the cross-sectional area multiplied by the length (volume = pi x radius x radius x length).
Volume of a cylinder = (pi) (radius)2 (length)Radius = 1/2 (diameter) = 12 inches = 1 footVolume = (pi) (1)2 (50) = 50 pi = 157.1 cubic feet = 1,175 gallons (rounded)That's the volume of the pipe. We have no way of knowing how much wateris in it. It could even be empty.
The volume of a cylinder is pi * r^2 * height. For a 10 foot pipe with a 1 foot internal diameter (1/2 foot radius), the volume is: ~ 3.1416 * (.5)^2 * 10 = 7.854 cu. ft. of water (or anything else)
The volume is 90.57 mm3
what is the radius? It depends on the the radius. Formula 3.14*radius squared*5=answer
A four-foot diameter pipe that is five feet long has a volume of 470 gallons.
150,207.75 cubic cm