A 24-inch diameter cylinder holds 23.5 gallons of water per foot of length/height.
A 5-inch pipe will hold approximately 0.36 gallons of water per linear foot. This calculation is based on the formula for calculating the volume of a cylinder (V = πr^2h), where the radius (r) is half the diameter of the pipe (2.5 inches) and the height (h) is 1 foot.
A cylinder with these dimensions will hold up to 13.06 gallons of water.
One foot of 3 inch pipe will hold approximately 0.625 gallons of water.
16foot
A two inch pipe can hold 0.1632 gallons per foot. It takes slightly over 6 feet of two inch pipe to hold one gallon of water.
Diameter = 1 inch so radius = 0.5 inches.Volume of cylinder = pi*r2*h = pi*(0.5)2*12 = 9.4 cubic inches, approx.
The amount of water a 4-inch pipe holds per foot can be calculated using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: V = πr²h. For a 4-inch diameter pipe, the radius is 2 inches (or 0.167 feet). Therefore, the volume per foot is approximately 0.35 cubic feet, which is equivalent to about 26.3 gallons of water.
It holds 702 cubic feet.
A 12 inch diameter round pipe will hold 4.89 UK gallons or 5.88 US gallons per foot.
2.75 Imperial gallons.
This cylinder will hold up to 19.65 gallons of water.
To determine how much water a 6-inch pipe can hold, you need to calculate its volume based on its length. The volume (in gallons) can be found using the formula for the volume of a cylinder: ( V = \pi r^2 h ), where ( r ) is the radius (3 inches for a 6-inch pipe) and ( h ) is the length of the pipe in inches. For example, a 10-foot (120-inch) length of a 6-inch pipe would hold about 18.9 gallons of water.