I recently discovered I could split a piece of 4 inch PVC pipe lengthwise heat it up with a heat gun then weight the pvc between some sheets of plywood and end up with a flat PVC sheet.

This was a revelation to me as I am a tinkerer and have sourced pieces of plastic from other sources for years.

Once I split the 4 inch pipe up the middle and flattened it I measured it and realised it was exactly 13 inches.

I left school 20 years ago and I do realise there is a direct correlation between radius and diameter but I was never very good at mathematics.

I currently have a sheet of rubber on my workbench to protect the surface but I think the pvc sheet would be great to protect it if it was big enough.

My workbench currently measures just over 24 inches.

What diameter of pipe would I need to create a PVC protective top for my work bench.

I’m in UK if that helps. There are standard sizes of 4,6,8,10 inches of PVC pipe available from what I can see.

I am no Mathematician so any help is greatly appreciated.

  • beaubbe@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The whole pipe will have a circumpherence 3.14x the diameter of the tube. Obviously being in the real world, it won’t be perfect as the plastic will stretch and contract with heat and pressure but 3x is a good ballpark. The mathematical relation is PI (3.14159…)