A ball point pen tube, a grain silo, a cigar canister, - - -
some real life examples are a water bottle, pipes, cans
a soup can, a toilet roll tube, a telescope
Hard disks are organized into sectors, tracks, and cylinders.
Soft drinks, alcohol, capacity of engine cylinders
no. not all cylinders are similar, some may even be slanted
Hydraulic cylinder use a liquid medium, often some type of viscous oil, in the cylinders and can be subject to higher pressures then pneumatic cylinders which use air or some other gas and work under a lower pressure.
Some examples of gases under pressure include compressed air, carbon dioxide cylinders used for carbonation in beverages, and oxygen tanks used in medical settings. These gases are stored at high pressure to keep them in their gaseous state for specific applications.
The Chevrolet 350 ci motors traditionally have 8 cylinders. There are examples of race-prepped v6 motors that have been built to that size, but those are a rare and expensive item to find.
Cylinders are three-dimensional geometric shapes with two parallel circular bases connected by a curved surface. Common examples include beverage cans, pipes, and storage tanks. In mathematics, a cylinder can be defined mathematically by its radius and height. Additionally, in everyday life, objects like batteries and certain types of batteries, as well as gas cylinders, also represent practical applications of cylindrical shapes.
Examples: pipettes, burettes, graduated cylinders, graduated containers, volume counters, etc.
Spatial figures are figures that are three dimensional. Some examples of spatial figures include cubes, cylinders, cones, prisms, pyramids, spheres and rectangular prisms. You can get some more details about these figures on Psychometric Success website.
some carry and some may not carry