If I have 3 tubes, each 1" diameter grouped together at 120° angles, what would be the diameter of a larger tube which could enclose the 3 smaller tubes? There must be a formula, or 2, to calculate this. Thanks.
I don't know of a formula but why not fire up "your favorite CAD program", create your four circles and then dimension the "all encompassing" one.
This is quite simple: as the tubes have equal diameters their CLs will be on a regular triangle.
Side of the triangle: d
Height of the triangle: d*cos 30°
Distance of one vertex to center of triangle: 2/3*d*cos 30°
Diameter of the enclosing circle: D=(2*2/3*cos 30°+1)d=2.155d. prex
motori@xcalcsREMOVE.com
So "d" here is the diameter of the small tubes (1". This looks good, at least better than the figures I was coming up with. Thanks a lot.
Sorry, my post was not clear enough. D is the diameter of each of the 3 tubes (1". The term D*(1+1/Cos(30)) represents the diameter of the envelope circle. I note that the number is the same as that derived by prex.