Area CalculationThe area of the hose section is equal to pi (3.1416) multiplied by the square of the radius. Garden hose comes in a variety of sizes, from 1/2-inch to 1-inch. 3/4-inch hose is typical. Using that as an example, the square of the radius (.375 multiplied by .375) equals .140625. That result multiplied times pi equals .4417875 square inches.Volume CalculationTo calculate the volume, the length of the hose must first be converted to the same measurement standard. 100 feet of garden hose is 1,200 inches. 1,200 times .4417875 equals 530.145 cubic inches.Volume ConversionTo state the volume in a more meaningful manner, cubic inches should be converted to a more common measure of liquid volume. One gallon of water contains 231 cubic inches. So, the 100-foot long, 3/4-inch diameter garden hose holds 2.3 gallons of water (530.145 divided by 231).
Yes, reactor number 3 is really in critical at Fukushima.
Velocity
The object's velocity is approximately 0.83m/s
There is basically only ONE thing that can make a velocity change, and that is a force acting on an object.
Weight of 50ft section of 3 inch hose with water in it?
Most heater hose is 5/8 inch inside diameter. Some cars do use a 1/2 inch and 3/4 inch also.
The capacity of a 25 ft hose with a diameter of 3 inches is 1.23 cubic feet. That is the maximum volume of water in the hose: there need not be any!
approx. about 10-11 hours. On a above ground pool
you need more info than that. you will need to provide the length of the hose and the inside diameter of the hose to calculate the amount of water it will hold
None, if the tap is turned off! It depends on the pressure!
If "6 inch" is the inside diameter of the hose, thenVolume = (pi) (radius)2 (length) = (pi) (3)2 (1,200) = 33,929.2 cubic inches = 146.88 gallons (rounded)
A water hose is a cylinder, and since the volume of a cylinder is pi*r^2*height, we can calculate the volume of the water hose by finding the radius and height. A 3 inch hose has a radius of 1.5 inches, and 50 ft is equal to 600 inches, so 1.5^2 is 2.25, and 2.25*600 is 1,350. Finally we multiply by Pi to get approximately 4,239 cubic inches. Since 1 cubic inch is equal to 0.00432 gallons, there are 18.3506 gallons.
Buy a 3" MECHANICAL COUPLING at any hardware or plumbing store. Made of rubber and has hose clamps.
6/16" or 3/8", in AN terms the dash number is in reference to how many 1/16 of an inch the OD of the hose is. -4=1/4" -8=1/2" -12=3/4" -20= 1 1/4"
Top hose is 2 inch I.D. Two lower hoses are 1 3/4 I.D.
On almost every engine it is in the side of the valve cover. It is a 2 to 3 inch long plastic part that has a 3/8ths hose that connects to the intake manifold.