It is impossible to determine the weight of the cylinder without knowing additional details. Such details include the material which the cylinder is made of, as well as any possible contents of the cylinder.
Height and diameter will give you the volume, if you know the density you can then calculate weight from that.
In the SI the unit of mass is kilogram: the mass of of a cylinder (height=diameter= 39,17 mm) made from 90 % platinum and 10 % iridium. The instrument to measure mass is a balance.
You can't. In addition to the cylinder's diameter, the pressure at its base also depends on the density and depth of the fluid in the cylinder ... which gives you the weight of fluid resting on the base area. The pressure alone is not enough information to allow you to calculate the diameter.
The weight (not mass) is 69.05 pound weight.
A 60 liter drum typically has an inner diameter of 380 mm and an outer diameter of 395 mm. The height is 575 mm, and the weight is 4,1 kg. In US measurements the inner diameter is 14.96 inches, the outer is 15.55 inches, and the height is 22.64 inches. The weight is 9.04 pounds.
In order to Calculate the weight of a hollow cylinder, you need to find out the density of the material of the cylinder first. once you have that, you can use the formulas below Find out volume of material as follows: Volume = Pi * (Outer Diameter of Cylinder)2/4 - Pi * (Inner Diameter of Cylinder)2/4 Mass = Density * Volume( from above equation) Note: Remember that units of Density and volume should be matching.
density times volume (Pi times radius squared times height)
Diameter = 4.45 cm ===> Radius = 2.225 cm Height = 4.05 cm Volume = pi R2 H = pi x (2.225)2 x 4.05 = pi x (4.950625) x (4.05) = 62.90903 cm3 Density = 1000/Vol = 15.87578 gm/cm3 (rounded)
The height of Mount Everest is 8,848 metres or 29,029 feet. I am not sure if the diameter has been recorded.
Weight is measured in Newtons, not kg. A kilogram measure mass.The density is approx 2.7 grams/cubic cm.
Since we want to calculate the weight of a cylinder, the formula is W = V*D. Or, Weight = Volume*Density. [πr²h is the formula for volume. Pi [3.14159...] x radius squared x height. Simply substitute if you have all aspects of the formula.]
Weight will depend on the size of the cylinder, and whether it is solid or hollow like a pipe. You said 2 foot round, but do you mean diameter or circumference- and how tall is the cylinder? We need more information to answer this.