It depends on the 371 your talking about the 57-58 371 is a raised deck height from the 54-56 324 engine. Then in 1959 they raised the deck height again so the 59-64 engines use the same deck height, which means the 59-60 371 engines being the last 371's share the same deck height as the 394 engines. Hope this helps you out.
The volume of a cylinder is pi times R2 times H. pi is approximately 3.14159 R = the radius of the base (circular end) of the cylinder H = the height (length) of the cylinder As related to automobile engines... the length of the cylinder is the "stroke" of the engine or the radius of the crankshaft throws multiplied by 2
To find the volume of a small pebble using a measuring cylinder, you would first fill the measuring cylinder with a known amount of water. Next, carefully drop the pebble into the water and measure the new water level. The difference between the initial and final water levels represents the volume of the pebble displaced, which is equal to the volume of the pebble itself.
The height of a cylinder all depends on what cylinder you are talking about. There is only an exact height if you have measured it yourself or someone has already measured it for you.
The volume of a circular cylinder varies directly with the height of the cylinder and with the square of the cylinder's radius If the height is halved and the radius is doubled then the volume will be increased.
The radius of a cylinder is independent of its height.
what is the radius of a cylinder if the height is 8.74
The height of a horizontal cylinder is 2 times its radius.
Volume of the cylinder: pi*radius*radius*height
Volume of a cylinder = pi*radius2*height
The height of this cylinder is 2.4868 cm
Gotta also have the height of the cylinder.
That will depend on its height because volume of the cylinder = pi*radius2*height