No not really it depends on how you r reading it
1 psig is equivalent to 51.71 mm (2 in) of mercury or to approx 700 mm (27.5 in) of water. Technically one cannot have apsig. Psig represents a pressure reading of the pressure above normal atmospheric pressure of 14.7 psi. You mean a psi.
The average "weight" of air is about 14 2/3 pounds per square inch. If you had some square "straw", one inch in a side, that reached upwards from sea level to the edge of space, and sat it on a scale (adjust for the weight of the straw!), the column of air - about 90 miles high - would weigh 14 2/3 pounds.
There's no such thing as "mercury vacuum". A volume of space can have solid mercury, liquid mercury, or mercury vapor in it, or it can be a vacuum. The weight of the "standard atmosphere" on any area is the same as the weight of a column of mercury 29.92 inches high on that same area, with no air above the mercury.
An inch of rain implies water one inch deep per surface area. An inch of rain equals 5.61 gallons per yard. An inch of rain equals 27,150 gallons per acre.
Is the 22 inch round measurement the circumference? The height of the container must also be given.
27.71 inches of water column equals 1 psi
16.387 cc is equal to one cubic inch of water or anything else.
It is approx 46.3 feet.
10" Water Column equals about .4 Pounds per Square Inch or 0.36127291827412783psi exactly.
-- 1 square inch weighs nothing, since its volume is zero. -- If the square inch is one end of a vertical column of water, then the column weighs about [ 5pounds 31/3ounces ] for each 12-ft of its height.
1 psig is equivalent to 51.71 mm (2 in) of mercury or to approx 700 mm (27.5 in) of water. Technically one cannot have apsig. Psig represents a pressure reading of the pressure above normal atmospheric pressure of 14.7 psi. You mean a psi.
The diameter of the water column does not affect the pressure.It is the height of the column that determines the pressure at the base.(and also the barometric pressure and temperature).
12psi
about an inch below the TOP of the filter...there should be a line on your filter...
12.01 psi
20 pounds per sq/in
this question can't be answered because you can only get a surface area calculation from 30X42 inches, (which is 1260 square inches) To calculate the volume, you need the depth of the water as well.