| John Bonnycastle - Geometry - 1848 - 320 pages
...whose circumference is 8 feet 4 inches, and its length 14 feet. Ans. 116.666, '%c. feet. PROBLEM V. To find the solidity of a cylinder. RULE.* Multiply...the cylinder, and the product will be the solidity. * The four following cases contain all the rules for finding the superficies and solidities of cylindric... | |
| Thomas Tate (mathematical master.) - 1848 - 284 pages
...the thickness of the deal 3 inches. Ans. &\ c.ft. 19. PROBLEM. To find the solidity of a prism, or of a cylinder. RULE. Multiply the area of the base by the perpendicular height, and the product will be the solidity. (See Geo. Art. 90.) MENSURATION OF SOLIDS. EXAMPLES. 1. What... | |
| Pliny Earle Chase - Arithmetic - 1848 - 244 pages
...cylinder, whose diameter is 7.5 feet, and height 49 feet ? PROBLEM VIII. To find the solid contents of a cylinder. RULE. Multiply the area of the base by the height. 22. The diameter of a cylinder is 13 inches, and the height 69 inches. What are the solid contents... | |
| Benjamin Greenleaf - Arithmetic - 1849 - 336 pages
...John Snow has a roller 12 feet long and 2 feet in diameter; what is its convex surface ? ART. 339. To find the solidity of a cylinder. RULE. — Multiply the area of the base by the altitude, and the product will be the solidity. 1. What is the solidity of a cylinder, 8 feet in length... | |
| J. M. Scribner - Mechanical engineering - 1849 - 286 pages
...and the diameter of its base 3 feet 3x3-14159=9-42477 Then, 9-42477x23=216-76971= surface. PBOBLEM IL To find the Solidity of a Cylinder. Rule. — Multiply the area of the base by the height, and the pro duct will give the solid contents. Examples — 1. What is the solidity of a cylinder,... | |
| George Roberts Perkins - Arithmetic - 1849 - 346 pages
...squares of the diameters multiplied by 0.7854. PROBLEM VII. — To find the solidity of a prism, or of a cylinder. RULE. Multiply the area of the base by the altitude. B. VII., Prop. XI.) (Geometry, EXAMPLES. 1. How many cubic feet in a rectangular stick of... | |
| Charles Davies - Geometry - 1850 - 238 pages
...14 feet, and the circumference of the base 8 feet 4 inches. Ans. 116,6666, &c., sq. ft. PROBLEM II. To find the solidity of a cylinder. RULE. Multiply the area of the base by the altitude, and the product will be the solidity. EXAMPLES. 1. What is the solidity of a cylinder, the... | |
| John Radford Young - Measurement - 1850 - 294 pages
...1801b. to a cubic foot?* Ans. 764 tons, nearly. PROBLEM II. — To find the solid content of a prism or cylinder. RULE. Multiply the area of the base by the perpendicular height of the prism or cylinder, and the product will be the area. The truth of this rule may be established as follows:... | |
| George Roberts Perkins - Arithmetic - 1850 - 364 pages
...squares of the diameters multiplied by 0-7854. PROBLEM VII. — To Jind the solidity of a prism, or of a cylinder. RULE. Multiply the area of the base by the altitude. B. VII., Prop. XI.) (Geometry, EXAMPLES. 1. How many cubic feet in a rectangular stick of... | |
| Oliver Byrne - Engineering - 1851 - 310 pages
...6-2832 x 20 = 125-6640 square feet, the convexity required. To find the solidity of a cylinder. — Multiply the area of the base by the perpendicular...the cylinder, and the product will be the solidity. What is the solidity of the cylinder ABCD, the diameter of whose base AB is 30 inches, and the height... | |
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