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weight of water

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Hood1

Mechanical
Aug 12, 2002
5
Can someone tell me the weight of 60" 5/8 wall thickness per foot and also the weight of water in a 60" line per foot weight. Thanks
 
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If it is CS pipe then it weighs approximately 181.898 kgs.

The calculation is 3.142 X (60"/12)ft X 1 ft X 5/(8x12) ft = 0.818 cu.ft = 0.0232 cu.m (1 cu.m = 35.28 cu.ft)

Weight of the pipe = volume X specific weight of steel
=0.0232 cu.m X 7843 kg/cu.m = 181.898 kgs.

For weight of water: 3.142X(ID)[script]2[/script]xlength/4

This will give you volume of pipe if you consider length as 1 foot. convert it to cu.m (for I am very poor in feet, nah I don't say my own feet[wink])

Specific weight of water is 1000kg/cu.m. Multiply the volume by specific weight and you will get weight of water.

Regards,

Repetition is the foundation of technology
 
hey wrong scripting.Read this instead.

For weight of water: 3.142 X (ID)2Xlength/4
Repetition is the foundation of technology
 
Hood1,

It sounds like you are designing for the supports.

If your 60" pipe is designed to certain standards (i.e. BS, ASTM, etc.), the standards will tell you the approximate weight it should be. If it is special made, then the pipe manufacturer will always be able to help.

Please also take into account for the weight of the internal lining (i.e. cement, epoxy lining, etc.), connection method (i.e. flanged, spligot, etc.)
 
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