Volume of a cylinder = Pi x radius squared x height. Divide by 231 to determine gallons. 4.08 gallons.
depends on the pressure pushing through the pipe
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.
up to 2.300 PSI
A water pipe.
The pipe diameter doesn't matter. If the pipe is discharging a cubic foot per second then it will discharge 86400 cubic feet in a day, because that is the number of seconds in one day. One acre foot is 43560 cubic feet, so the pipe discharges 86400/43560 ~= 1.98 acre feet. On the other hand, if you meant to say the water velocity exiting the pipe is 1 foot per second (not one cubic foot per second), then, assuming you have the average water velocity, you need to figure the flow rate first. The pipe has a radius of 2 in. so its cross sectional area is pi*r^2 = pi*4 ~= 12.57. So a volume of 12.57 in.^2 * 12 in. is discharged per second, which is ~ 150.80 in.^3 or about 0.09 cubic feet. From there it's the same as above. On the other other hand, if your water velocity is not the average over the cross sectional area but instead a point velocity, say at the middle of the stream of water, then you need to figure the average velocity. You'll need a hydraulics book with pipe roughness coefficients for that.
depends on the pressure pushing through the pipe
much water per foot will a 5 inch pipe hold
The volume of the pipe is 0.2078 gallon per foot of length.I have no idea how much water might be in it.
16 gallons
16 gallons
2.75 Imperial gallons.
The volume of water in a 4-inch diameter, 1-foot section of pipe is 0.6528 gallons of water.
1 and 1/2 gallons
The volume of water in a 1 inch x 100 foot pipe is: 4.08 US gallons.
Do you not think it might depend on how wide the pipe is? Perhaps it would be helpful if you provided that critical bit of information!
A 4-ft diameter pipe holds approx 78.3 US gallons.
That depends on the diameter of the pipe.