Its very easy please follow the steps below,
1. Calculate the DN Required by using Hydrauic calculation
2. Calculate the PN required
3. Calculate the SN required
4. Use the mixuture formula to decide the composition
5. Convert this into Kg/m
6. Use the classical laminate theory to calculate the thicness by forming a nine by nine matrix
For calculating the collapse pressure of a pipe, you first need to calculate the Hoop stress, which is given by :- Stress = Circumferencial Force/(radial thickness*axial length) If the stress crosses this value the pipe would collapse.
Pipe schedule tell you something about the wall thickness of a pipe. Higher schedule means thicker wall. The actual thickness must be read from a pipe specification sheet, as it differs from material to material. Typical pipe sch. are Sch 20, 40, 80, 160, XS, XXS.
3.5 Mme
I don't think 6 inch pipe is available in schedule 30.
16 gauge pipe refers to the wall thickness of the pipe exclusive of its diameter.It is 0.064 inches thick, this is a steel wire gauge measurement.Pipes are typically sold by schedule numbers. A wall thickness of 0.064 inches would correspond to pipe schedule 40 for 1/8" diameter pipe (0.068"), schedule 10 for 1/4" and 3/8" pipe (0.065") and schedule 5 for pipe diameters 1/2" to 2" (0.065"). Over 2" diameter pipe, schedule 5 (the smallest wall thickness) is thicker than 16 gauge steel.
what will be thickness of grp pipe
Wall thickness of 600 mm is 9.02 for pressure rating of PN 10 & 10.52for pressure rating of PN 16.
Can you calculate the ID of a pipe when you have the OD to be 10.75" and the wall thickness to be 0.5"Depends on what you know about it. If you have the outer diameter and you know the wall thickness, then ID = OD-2 x wall thickness
t = PxDxA/2E where, t = thickness P = pressure D = pipe Diameter A = factor of safety E = tensile strength of pipe
By measuring the schedule diameter. That's the distance straight across the inside of the pipe from one side to the other, as opposed to the outside of the pipe to the other.
You need more information than that ! You need the density of the material it's made from, and the thickness of the pipe !
50x30x715 heightx2.5 thickness
For calculating the collapse pressure of a pipe, you first need to calculate the Hoop stress, which is given by :- Stress = Circumferencial Force/(radial thickness*axial length) If the stress crosses this value the pipe would collapse.
Reinforcing pads mirror the pipe that they are being welded to in size, thickness, and material. To measure the diameter of the pad, measure the pipe at a cross section.
Find the circumference of the exterior of the pipe, then find the circumference of the interior. subtract the two to find the thickness of the pipe. then multiply the length of the pipe. Now you have the mass of the pipe, so calculate that into the weight of steel or aluminum or whatever the pipe is made of.
Weight of pipe per Meter in Kg for MS Pipes = 3.14 * (Outer diameter of pipe in Mtr. - wall thickness in Mtr. ) * Wall Thickness in Mtr. * 7850
You need to specify the wall thickness in order to calculate the weight.