You can figure it out exactly by filling a 9 in cake pan with water and then putting in the cake pan you think might be it (do this 3 times). I'm guessing a deep 9x13 pan. A cake mix usually makes 2 9in cakes, or one 9x13. Hope this is helpful
you might be able to, but it depends on how thick or thin your cake mix is
The volume of the batter is the same. Volume in the 6 in pan: Pi r2 h = 18Pi . Volume in the 8 in pan: 16hPi . Equating the two: 18Pi = 16hPi gives h = 9/8 in.
Approximately 2 cups.
9/13 is a proper fraction in its simplest form. (13 is prime).
A cake pan shaped like a rectangle, typically 9" x 13".
A cake pan shaped like a rectangle, typically 9" x 13".
A 9" X 13" baking pan would work well.
It depends on how deep the pan is.
A 9x13 pan has a much greater volume than a round cake pan... if you need to use round pans you would probably be better off substituting two 9' round pans for one 9x13' pan. Ex.: The volume of a 9x13 pan is 9*13*1.5 = 175.5 Volume of a 9' round pan is 3.14*4.52*1.5 = 95 So a 9' round pan will hold about half the batter of a 9x13' pan.
None. A centimetre (cm) is a measure of distance or length in 1-dimensional space. The cross-sectional of the cake pan is a measure of area in 2-dimensional space. The two measure different things and, according to the basic rules of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other is not valid.
You can figure it out exactly by filling a 9 in cake pan with water and then putting in the cake pan you think might be it (do this 3 times). I'm guessing a deep 9x13 pan. A cake mix usually makes 2 9in cakes, or one 9x13. Hope this is helpful
The farberware 9-inch cake round cake pan is the cheapest one. You can purchase this pan online for $6.95.
Any pan in which a cake is baked is called a cake pan, or cake tin. In general, cake pans come in specific sizes that are used for specific recipes. Different types of cake pans include six, eight, nine or ten inch round pans, 9 x 13 inch rectangular pans, tube pans, loaf pans, and cupcake tins.
you might be able to, but it depends on how thick or thin your cake mix is
The volume of the batter is the same. Volume in the 6 in pan: Pi r2 h = 18Pi . Volume in the 8 in pan: 16hPi . Equating the two: 18Pi = 16hPi gives h = 9/8 in.
A standard cake mix yields about 5 cups of batter, and a 12x2 inch cake pan takes 8 cups of batter. If your pan is 3 inches deep instead of 2, you will need 11 cups. So two cake mixes will be about right...you'll have a bit left over with a 12x2.