Between $.50 and $1.00 per foot, depending on what you're buying (white, gray, schedule 40 thin wall vs schedule 80 thick wall, etc.)
1/4" PVC pipe isn't carried at the home-improvement stores.
Sources I've found include www.usplastic.com and www.rhfs.com.
Not affiliated with either of these sources.
about 25 bucks per foot .
XXh in piping is a determination of the wall thickness of the pipe. XXh stands for double extra heavy (or double extra strong) under an old standard measuring system. It has the thickest pipe wall of any other. The actual thickness is dependent on the nominal pipe diameter. Present determination of wall thicknesses of pipes is called schedules. Schedule 10 pipe is the thinnest while schedule 160 is the thickest. Heavy pipe is slightly thicker than today's sch. 40 pipe, extra heavy slightly thicker than sch. 80 pipe, and double extra heavy is slightly thicker than today's sch. 160 pipe. XXh pipe is no longer in use commercially and has been replaced with schedule 160 pipe, XXh Brass or Bronze pipe is forged or molded from bronze, rather than Iron or steel. Some wall thicknesses of double extra strong pipes are: 1/2 inch nom. dia. = 0.294 inch thick 3/4 inch nom. dia. = 0.308 inch thick 1 inch nom. dia. = 0. 358 inch thick 1 1/4 inch nom. dia. = 0.382 inch thick 1 1/2 inch nom. dia. = 0.400 inch thick 2 inch nom. dia. = 0.436 inch thick
The price of PVC pipe varies from retailer to retailer. Home depot and Lowes sells most sizes for under three dollars a foot. 4 inch PVC pipe shouldn't cost more than $20 for a ten foot section.
It depends on the length of the pipe.
Then the wall thickness is 1 inch
The volume of this pipe is 261.8 cubic feet.
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.
Given enough time the entire ocean could be pumped through a half-inch pipe.
The capacity of a pipe with a 54 inch inner diameter and a length of 120000 inches is 1,099,306,101 cubic inches, approx = 636,173 cu feet. There may or may not be any water in the pipe!
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.
The volume of the pipe is 0.2078 gallon per foot of length.I have no idea how much water might be in it.
Probably the wrong size flange. Is the flange a toilet collar? If so the pipe is probably 4 inch.