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)
V = pi*r2*h = pi*(1.5/2)2*(100*12) cubic inches = 2120.6 cubic inches.
0.212 331 gallons per foot.
If 8 is the diameter, the formula for volume would be: pi r^2 h The radius would be half of the diameter: pi 4^2 h h is 1 foot or 12 inches pi 4^2 * 12 = 603.19 in^3 of water per foot.
10.4448, assuming 16" inside diameter. 16" outside diameter would be slightly less.
It depends on the diameter of the straw, which varies. Multiply the diameter by 3.14 and the result by the length of the straw.
A 24-inch diameter cylinder holds 23.5 gallons of water per foot of length/height.
Over 9,000.
A three-inch diameter pipe one foot long holds 0.367 gallon.
A 12 inch diameter round pipe will hold 4.89 UK gallons or 5.88 US gallons per foot.
much water per foot will a 5 inch pipe hold
The volume of water in a 4-inch diameter, 1-foot section of pipe is 0.6528 gallons of water.
A 100-foot hose with an inside diameter of five inches can hold 102 US gallons of water.
16foot
31.987 gallons per foot.
A 100-foot pipe with an inside diameter of 12 inches has a maximum volume of about 78.54 gallons of water.
A 1-foot length of a pipe with an 1-inch internal diameter will hold pi*r2*h cubic inches where r = 0.5, h = 12 So 9.42 cubic inches.
The volume of a 5,000-foot long pipe with a 6-inch diameter is: 981.75 cubic feet.