Twodose
Active member
Anyone know of a chart online that will tell you the volume of water per linear foot in a 3/8" pipe?
The formula is pi times the RADIUS squared, not the diameter, so it would be 3.14 X .1875 sq.so would the given formula be V= 3.14 x .375² x 1026 for the length of run for bay # 7 of 85’-6”?
Twodose,Anyone know of a chart online that will tell you the volume of water per linear foot in a 3/8" pipe?
Twodose,I did it like this:
.375 x .375 = .140625 x 3.14 = .441562 x 1026" (85'-6") = 453.042612 Cubic Inches ÷ 231 CI per gallon= 1.961223.
Or about 2 gal.
Would this be correct?
This sounds about right for a run of 3/8ths" x 85'-6" long.
MEP, I was worried about you there for a while. I had noticed that you used the diameter to figure this out and said to myself "My god, he is losing it. We are all screwed!" I then got to pecking on my calculator to figure out the volume of this hose so I could post and verify that about 1/2 gallon was correct. Had I noticed that there was another page of posts I would have saved a little time and noticed that you had caught your mistake. Hmmm, unbelieveable, I made a mistake too.I just realized that the calculator to which I linked also asked for the radius of the tube. So 1 foot of 3/8" ID hose should contain 1.3259 cu. in. of fluid or .73 fl. oz.
FWIW, I filled a 12' bay hose with water and drained it into a measuring cup. It was about 11 1/4 ounces.
Twodose, Mac, Mep007, Pat, & others,I just realized that the calculator to which I linked also asked for the radius of the tube. So 1 foot of 3/8" ID hose should contain 1.3259 cu. in. of fluid or .73 fl. oz.
FWIW, I filled a 12' bay hose with water and drained it into a measuring cup. It was about 11 1/4 ounces.
That's certainly true with GoodYear hose. I make my own fragrance and shampoo hoses out of blue Neptune (Looks better and it doesn't leave black marks on the door sills) and I can feel variances in the inside diameter when I'm pulling the hose over the tubing.mjwalsh said:there are tolerances with the manufacturing process that we have to be on the alert for
I hadn't thought of that - the hose I used had been on for at least a year, maybe two. I'll take a new piece and run the test again.mjwalsh said:I remember replacing a 3/8" supply hose to my farthest bay that lasted for 20 years & there definitely was natural erosion that made the inside diameter significantly larger! A caliper could potentially help there.
How do you figure the radius is 3/16 on a 3/8 id pipe? Is it half the diameter?The formula is pi times the RADIUS squared, not the diameter, so it would be 3.14 X .1875 sq.