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.
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.
This cylinder will hold up to 19.65 gallons of water.