You use a tape measure, or similar.
Yes, a water tank can be in the shape of a cuboid. A cuboid is a three-dimensional shape with six rectangular faces, and a water tank can have this shape for practical reasons such as efficient storage and easy installation.
It depends on which unit of measurement you are using.
6 ft by 20 ft is not enough information for us to answer We need to know the radius or diameter of the tank and its height and you have to tell us which measurement is which.
There is no standard shape for a tank, so the answer depends on the particular tank.
In order to calculate the capacity of the tank, you have to know its shape, and every dimension of that shape. For example, if it's the shape of a sphere, you need one number ... the radius of the sphere. If it's the shape of a cylinder, then you need both the radius of the end and the length of the cylinder ... two numbers. If the tank is the shape of a brick, then you need to know the length, width, and height ... three separate numbers. In your question, you haven't even told us the shape of the tank, so no answer is possible.
Yes, a water tank can be in the shape of a cuboid. A cuboid is a three-dimensional shape with six rectangular faces, and a water tank can have this shape for practical reasons such as efficient storage and easy installation.
It can hold 108000 more cubic cm.
A spherical water tank is stronger, as any forces, internally and externally, is spread around the surface evenly. Also, there is a weakness in cuboid shaped tanks at the seams and corners where the metal has been bent to form the squarish shape.
It depends on the shape of the tank.
It depends on which unit of measurement you are using.
5.68 psi - go to http://www.onlineconversion.com/pressure.htm to convert to what measurement you need. I am not sure what metric measurement is used where you live.
Assuming the tank is cuboid, the area of its base is 60 x 40 cm squared, i.e. 2400 cm squared. Thus the height of water is 81000/2400 cm = 33.75 cm.
If it's still in reasonable shape, you can use it as a compressor air storage tank for your air tools..
I have a space of .800x.600x x1.000 metres, how much water will it hold?
just fill the tank figure that out when you put the water in the tank. and how many containers what measurement. oh and 2. 3 inches dimensions please but still just fill it. just fill it does it have to be exact? seriously
A round tank 36 inches wide and 10 feet deep holds 528 gallons.
The shape does not matter. This is fundamental to understanding hydraulic forces.