enigma said:
What you may have heard is this, Nicholas:
Between a solid pipe and a hollow pipe of the same weight, the hollow pipe will be more resistant to bending. It will also have a much larger radius.
From the equations already presented above, the maximum bending moment is proportional to:
d^4 - d_{i}^4
The mass of the pipe is proportional to the cross-sectional area which is proportional to difference in the squares of the outer and inner radius (or diameter since our constant K is arbitrary), so we can set that equal to constant and eliminate either the outer or inner diameter from our equation:
d^2 - d_{i}^2 = K
d_{i}^2 = d^2 - K
d_{i}^4 = d^4 - 2Kd^2 + K^2
d^4 - d_{i}^4 = 2Kd^2 - K^2
Thus for a constant mass, we see the bending moment of a pipe is quadratically proportional to the outer diameter:
2Kd^2 - K^2
Not accounting for other factors such as localized shear stress, compression load if employed as a vertical structural beam, etc, the larger the diameter hollow pipe, will have a quadratically higher maximum bending moment than a small diameter hollow pipe of the same mass.
This moment property is conceptually related to the physics of the ratio of lengths of fulcrum or ratio of length to height of a truss, visualize the diameter of the pipe as the short side of the fulcrum, where forces are more concentrated the shorter the short side relative to the long side.
A solid pipe of equivalent constant mass, would be limited to an outer diameter of \sqrt{K}, because d_{i} = 0.
If I have misstated, please free to post a correction. Hope my input is helpful.
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Example: compare a Schedule 40 2.5" pipe, which has an outside diameter of 2.875", inside diameter of 2.469", and wall thickness of 0.203", to a Schedule 10 3.5" pipe, which has an outside diameter of 4.0", inside diameter of 3.760", and wall thickness of 0.120". The 4" pipe has 14% less mass, but comparing d^4 - d_{i}^4 has 80% higher maximum bending moment before elasticity stress failure.
Another example with maximum bending moment calculation for GI pipe mast (30 Ksi yield strength):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_moment_of_area#Circular_cross_section
20' x 4" Sched 5 (1/12" wall), 15T load, 32 kg, 28T@100" bending
20' x 4" Sched 5 (1/12" wall), 28T load, 67 kg, 28T@100" bending
(3 Ksi concrete filled with 3" hollow or pvc pipe center)
20' x 2.875" Sched 10 (1/8" wall), 15T load, 32 kg, 14T@100" bending
20' x 2.875" Sched 5 (1/12" wall), 11T load, 23 kg, 10T@100" bending
T is tons