32.639923673660189490520970215891 to be exact. How do I know? I don't!! you take radius times radius times 3.1415926535897932384626433832795 and that gives you the square inches of the 2" pipe which equals the same as Pi and then you take 200 times 12 which equals 2400 then times that by Pi and you get total amount of square inches in the pipe and divide into 231 ( 231 sq inches makes a gallon) and you get this amount of gallons = 32.639923673660189490520970215891! so ALMOST thirty two and 5/8 gallons.
About 11.3 feet of 3" pipe can hold 5 gallons of water.
This pipe will hold 1,468.8 gallons of water.
432pi. formula:π(r^2)h
A two inch pipe can hold 0.1632 gallons per foot. It takes slightly over 6 feet of two inch pipe to hold one gallon of water.
It depends on the cross sectional area of the pipe.
That all depends on how long said 3" pipe is?
A 1.5 inch (diameter) pipe that is 10 feet long can hold approximately 3.32 gallons of water. This calculation is based on the volume of a cylindrical pipe.
There need not be any water in the pipe! The volume of the pipe is 1044 Imperial gallons
This pipe can hold up to 0.5 cubic foot or 3.7 gallons of water.
In the UK a 300mm (12" = 305mm) steel pipe with wall thickness of 6.35mm will hold 53.24 litres per metre
One foot of 3 inch pipe will hold approximately 0.625 gallons of water.
A 28mm round bin holds how much product