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Water tanks are large chambers for storing water. They come in a variety of styles, including horizontal cylinders, vertical cylinders, and rectangles. The proper method for determining tank capacity depends on the shape of the water tank. Keep in mind, though, that your results will be estimates only. This is because your calculations will determine the tank’s volume, assuming a perfect, solid geometric shape.

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Calculating the Capacity of a Horizontal Cylinder Tank

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  1. The region enclosed by the circle at the bottom of the cylinder is your bottom base surface (B). A radius is any line segment that runs from a circle’s center to its perimeter. To find the radius, simply measure from the mid-point of the cylinder’s bottom to the outside of the circle.
    • A diameter is any straight line segment that passes through the center of the circle and has endpoints on the circle’s perimeter. For any circle, the diameter will be twice the radius. Therefore, you can also find the radius of the circle at the bottom of the cylinder by measuring the complete radius and dividing that number in half.
  2. Once you know the radius of your bottom base surface (B), you can calculate the area. To do so, use the formula B = πr2, using your radius as r and 3.14159 for π, which is a mathematical constant.
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  3. You can now determine the total volume of the tank by multiplying the area by the length of the tank. The full formula for total volume of the tank is Vtank = πr2h.
  4. If you imagine a circle cut into slices, like a pizza, each slice is a sector. If a chord (a line segment that joins two points on a curve) cuts through that sector, it divides the sector into two parts: a triangle and a segment. This segment is important because to calculate the filled volume of your cylinder, you’ll have to find the area of a segment (by finding the area of the whole sector and subtracting the area of the triangle) and multiply it by the length of the cylinder.
  5. The sector is a fractional portion of the area of the whole circle. To find its area, use the formula shown above.
  6. Find the area of the triangle that was formed by the chord that cut through the sector. Use the formula shown above.
  7. Now that you have both the area of your sector and the area of your triangle, a subtraction will yield the area of your segment, D.
  8. When you multiply the area of your segment by the height, the product is the filled volume of your tank. The relevant formulas are shown above.
  9. Your final step depends on if the height, d, is greater than or less than the radius, r.
    • If the height is less than the radius, use the volume created from the filled height Vfill. So,
    • If the height is greater than the radius, use the volume created by the empty portion, minus the total volume of the tank. This will give you the filled volume:
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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Calculating the Capacity of a Vertical Cylinder Tank

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  1. The region enclosed by the circle at the bottom of the cylinder is your bottom base surface (B). A radius is any line segment that runs from a circle’s center to its perimeter. To find the radius, simply measure from the mid-point of the cylinder’s bottom to the outside of the circle.
    • A diameter is any straight line segment that passes through the center of the circle and has endpoints on the circle’s perimeter. For any circle, the diameter will be twice the radius. Therefore, you can also find the radius of the circle at the bottom of the cylinder by measuring the complete radius and dividing that number in half.
  2. Once you know the radius of your bottom base surface (B), you can calculate the area. To do so, use the formula B = πr2, using your radius as r and 3.14159 for π, which is a mathematical constant.
  3. You can now determine the total volume of the tank by multiplying the area by the length of the tank. The full formula for total volume of the tank is Vtank = πr2h.
  4. The filled volume is just a shorter cylinder with the same radius but a different height: the fill height, d. Therefore: 𝑉 = π𝑟2h.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Calculating the Capacity of a Rectangular Tank

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  1. To determine the volume of a rectangular tank, multiply the length (l) times the width (w) times the height (h). The width is the horizontal distance from side to side. The length is the longest dimension, and the height is the vertical length from top to bottom.
  2. For rectangular tanks, the filled volume is simply the same length and width with a shorter height. The new height is the fill height, d. Therefore, filled volume is equal to the length times the width times the fill height.
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  • Question
    Water tank height is 12 feet by 12 feet by 12 feet. What is stored capacity?
    Community Answer
    1728 square feet assuming that the length, width and height are all 12 feet.
  • Question
    My cylindrical tank is 916 cubic feet. What's the capacity of water in liters?
    Donagan
    Top Answerer
    There are 28.32 liters in a cubic foot. Multiply 916 by 28.32.
  • Question
    There are 1250 liters of water in a tank at present. If the tank is 0.625 full. What is the capacity of tank?
    Community Answer
    2,000Liters. 1,250 liters divide by .625 (the present content of the tank) = 2,000 liters.
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      Tips

      • Remember that these calculations will only give you estimates. They assume perfect geometric shapes, and your water tank will not conform exactly.
      • Online calculators are available to determine volume, assuming you have measurements like the radius, length, and height.


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      About This Article

      Article Summary X

      To work out water tank capacity for a horizontal cylinder tank, measure the radius of the bottom of the cylinder and find the area of the circle. Next, multiply the area by the tank's length to determine the tank's total volume. To determine fill height, identify a circular sector and triangular segment, find the area for both, and subtract the segment's area from the sector's area. Then, multiply that answer by the cylinder height to calculate the filled volume! For tips on working out water tank capacity for tanks of other shapes and sizes, read on!

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