pi × r2 × L (r=radius, L=length)
The pipe's volume is the product of its cross-sectional area and its length. The area of a circle is pi*(radius)^2, so in this case pi*9sq.in. or about 28.3 square inches. Multiply this area by the length of pipe you are using to obtain a volume. A 10 foot length of 6 inch pipe will have 3393 cubic inches of volume or 1.96 cubic feet, or 14.7 US Gallons.
V = 0.0002011 cubic meters or 201,100 cubic millimeters.
The measure of the amount of space a solid figure is Volume
If the diameter is 8 inches, the cross sectional area of the pipe is 16 pi sq in. The volume of one foot length of pipe is therefore 16 x pi x 12 cu. in. Two of these 'blocks' leave the pipe per second, so the answer is 384 pi cu. in.
This pipe will hold 706.9 cubic meters of water or 186,700 US gallons.
The volume of this pipe is 28,510,000 mm3
The volume of this pipe would be 0.3817 m3
The volume of the pipe is 1,154.5 cubic feet.
The internal diameter of the pipe times pi times its length will yield the volume it can contain. The outer diameter of the pipe times pi times its length will yield the volume that the pipe will displace when it is submerged or buried. The volume the pipe will displace minus the volume it will contain will yield the volume of material that makes up the pipe.
The volume of this pipe is 261.8 cubic feet.
measure the radius of the pipe. (half the diameter - the width of the pipe) then measure the length of the pipe. then use the formula pi (3.14) x radius2 x length. the answer is the volume in the pipe
It depends on the type of figure. If it is a 2D figure, then it is called area. If it is a 3D figure, then it is called volume.
An L shaped figure is a plane figure and so will not have a volume.
-12690
The volume of this pipe is 1,113 cubic inches or 0.644 cubic feet.
The volume of a 12 inch x 12 inch pipe is: 1,360 cubic inches
By comparing the volume given to each figure.