A conical frustum is the portion of a right circular cone that remains after the tip has been sliced off by a plane parallel to the base. In other words, you start with a cone, cut it with a flat, horizontal slice, and keep the middle section between the two circular faces. The result is a solid with two different circular ends and straight, sloping sides.
This shape appears frequently in real life. Common examples include paper drinking cups, funnels, tapered buckets, lampshades, some flower pots, and decorative columns. In manufacturing and construction, you may encounter frustums in hoppers, silos, transition sections in ductwork, and many types of containers where a smooth taper is useful for strength, flow, or aesthetics.
Knowing the volume of a conical frustum helps you answer questions such as:
This calculator lets you quickly compute that volume from three dimensions: the top radius, the bottom radius, and the vertical height between the two circular faces. All calculations are done directly in your browser; no data is sent to a server.
The volume of a conical frustum with:
is given by the standard formula:
V = (π × h × (r₁² + r₂² + r₁ × r₂)) / 3
In MathML form, the same equation can be written precisely as:
This expression combines three area-like terms inside the parentheses: one based on the top radius, one based on the bottom radius, and a cross term that accounts for the smooth taper between them. Because of this cross term, the volume is more than just the simple average of the volumes of two separate cones.
The familiar volume of a right circular cone with radius R and height H is:
Vcone = (π × R² × H) / 3
You can think of a frustum as the difference between two cones that share the same axis:
The frustum height is h = H₂ − H₁. Because the cutting plane is parallel to the base, the two cones are similar, so their dimensions are proportional. That similarity leads to the compact frustum formula above when you subtract the smaller cone’s volume from the larger cone’s volume.
Note that this tool expects non-negative values. If any dimension is zero, the resulting volume is zero. Negative dimensions do not make physical sense and should not be used.
The output represents the internal volume of an ideal conical frustum that matches the dimensions you entered. In practical terms, you can interpret the value in several ways:
Always remember that the volume is in cubic units. If you mix units (for example, radii in centimeters and height in inches), the result will not correspond to a real physical quantity. Keep all length measurements in the same unit to ensure a meaningful cubic-unit output.
Suppose you have a tapered container shaped like a frustum with:
Step 1: Compute the squared radii and cross term:
Step 2: Add these terms inside the parentheses:
r₁² + r₂² + r₁ × r₂ = 25 + 100 + 50 = 175
Step 3: Multiply by π and h, then divide by 3:
V = (π × h × (r₁² + r₂² + r₁ × r₂)) / 3
V = (π × 20 × 175) / 3
First, 20 × 175 = 3,500. So:
V = (π × 3,500) / 3 ≈ (3.14159 × 3,500) / 3 ≈ 10,995.6 / 3 ≈ 3,665.2 cm³
The frustum’s volume is approximately 3,665 cm³. If you want this in liters, recall that 1,000 cm³ = 1 liter, so the volume is about 3.67 liters.
The frustum volume formula is related to those of cones and cylinders. The table below compares the key formulas and typical use cases.
| Shape | Dimensions | Volume Formula | Typical Uses |
|---|---|---|---|
| Right Circular Cylinder | radius r, height h | V = π × r² × h | Cans, pipes, uniform tanks, columns |
| Right Circular Cone | radius R, height H | V = (π × R² × H) / 3 | Funnels, conical piles, nozzles |
| Conical Frustum | top radius r₁, bottom radius r₂, height h | V = (π × h × (r₁² + r₂² + r₁ × r₂)) / 3 | Tapered cups, hoppers, transition ducts, decorative columns |
If your top radius and bottom radius happen to be equal (r₁ = r₂), the frustum becomes a cylinder, and the formula simplifies automatically to the cylinder volume formula. In that special case, the cross term preserves the correct volume without any extra work on your part.
This calculator is based on an ideal geometric model. To use it correctly, keep the following assumptions and limitations in mind:
By understanding these assumptions, you can better judge when this calculator is appropriate for your application and when a more detailed engineering model or measurement might be required.