Yes, a hollow pipe does have a number of volume measures.
There are the volume of
the whole object - relevant if you want to pack the pipe in something,
the hollow interior - relevant to find out how much it can contain,
the difference between the two - relevant to work out the amount of material required to make the pipe.
Unfortunately, a question mark at the end of an incomplete phrase gives no indication as to which one you mean. Try resubmitting with a complete sentence.
The volume of any cylindrical tube can be found by multiplying the area of the circular base by the height of the tube. The exact formula is height * (pi * radius squared).
volume = πr2h
surface area = 2πrh + πr2
lateral area = 2πrh
A tall cylindrical burner with a flame on top, an oxygen valve and a gas supply tube.
looking for length of tube if i.d is 93mm and is to hold 1ltr of fluid
Orange shield
The function of a boiling tube is to contain substances that are being heated in the flame of a Bunsen burner. They are small, cylindrical vessels made from borosilicate glass.a boiling tube is used for containing or heating small amounts of substances
V=pi•r•r (I don't have a pi or exponent button)
The clarinet has the shape of a cylindrical tube.
Volume of a cylindrical tank in cubic units: pi*radius2*height
it is the cylindrical structure which is used to support the eyepiece. it is the cylindrical structure which is used to support the eyepiece.
Volume = cross-section area*length
Volume = cross-sectional area times height
A simple sleeve or cylindrical tube works like a bearing.
pi * radius2 * height ( pie = 3.14) ( radius is half the diameter) ( the height is 60cm) multiply them all together you get.............................
A cylindrical tower with a diameter of 10 feet and a height of 30 feet has a volume of: 2,360 cubic feet.
Density = Mass/Volume.
Volume = pi*radius2*height