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Revision Work 5

This document is a revision worksheet focused on area and volume calculations for various geometric shapes, including cylinders, spheres, cones, and cuboids. It contains multiple problems requiring students to calculate volumes, surface areas, and dimensions based on given measurements. The worksheet is designed for educational purposes, likely for a mathematics class.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
7 views

Revision Work 5

This document is a revision worksheet focused on area and volume calculations for various geometric shapes, including cylinders, spheres, cones, and cuboids. It contains multiple problems requiring students to calculate volumes, surface areas, and dimensions based on given measurements. The worksheet is designed for educational purposes, likely for a mathematics class.

Uploaded by

9ttcggbw25
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Revision Work 5

Area & Volume

Name: _______________________________________ Class: ________ Total: ______


100

1. Tennis balls are sold in two types of containers; a


cylinder and a cuboid. Both containers are just big
enough to hold four balls, as shown.
A tennis ball has a diameter of 6.4 cm.
Calculate the volume of each container.

2. Simon has two pieces of wood. A cuboid which measures 6 cm by 5 cm by 4 cm and a sphere of
radius 3 cm.

a) Which piece of wood has the largest volume?

b) Which piece of wood has the largest surface area?

3. The volume of a sphere is 58 cm³. What is its surface area?

Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 1


4. Lentil soup is sold in cylindrical tins. Each tin has a base radius of
3.8 cm and a height of 12.6 cm. 12.6cm

a) Calculate the total surface area of a tin.

3.8cm

b) Calculate the volume of a soup tin.

5. The diagram shows a water tank. The tank is a hollow cylinder


joined to a hollow hemisphere at the top. The tank has a circular
base. Both the cylinder and the hemisphere have a diameter of
46 cm. The height of the tank is 90 cm. 90cm

a) Work out the total surface area of the water tank.

46cm

b) Find the volume of water the tank can hold when it is completely full.

Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 2


6. The figure shows an ice-cream cone of radius 5 cm and height
12 cm.

a) Calculate the total surface area of the ice-cream cone.

b) Calculate the volume of ice-cream if it fills the cone completely.

7. The area of an equilateral triangle is 36 cm2. Find the length of one of its sides.
Give your answer correct to 3 significant figures.

Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 3


8. The measurements given in the solid shown, made up of a
cylinder attached to a cone, are all in cm.

a) Calculate the total surface area of the solid.

b) Calculate the volume of the solid.

9. A compound solid is made up of a hemisphere


placed upon a cuboid measuring 6 cm by 6 cm by 10
cm as shown in the figure.

Calculate the volume of the solid.

Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 4


10. A cylindrical hole of height 14 cm and diameter 10 cm is drilled
through a cone of slant height 26 cm and radius 16 cm as shown
in the diagram.

Find the remaining volume of the cone in terms of  after the


hole is drilled.

11.
The figure shows a container in the shape of a cone with a
radius of 2 m and a height of 6 m. The smaller upper cone
filled with air has a radius of 1 m and a height of 3 m.

Calculate the volume of water in the cone in terms of 𝝅.

Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 5


12. Calculate the volume of the prisms shown below.

a)

b)

13. A solid is made up of a cuboid measuring 16 m by


10 m by 6 m attached to a cone of height 12 m as
shown in the diagram.

Calculate the volume of the solid.

Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 6


14. Ten solid metal spheres of radius 6 cm are melted down and recast into a solid metal square-based
pyramid of side 140 mm.
Find the height of the pyramid to the nearest cm.

15. A metal cube of side 2 cm is dropped into some water contained in a cylindrical container of
diameter 18 cm. Find the rise in water level when the cube is dropped in the water.
Give your answer to the nearest mm.



Revision Work 5 – Area & Volume – Ms. Alison Camilleri pg. 7

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