One Formula Unifies All Prism Shapes
You know
where
- Rectangular prism:
- Triangular prism:
- Cylinder:
V = Bh: The Cross-Section Idea
The base is the shape you see when you slice perpendicular to the height.
Worked Example With a Rectangular Prism
A box measures 8 cm × 5 cm × 3 cm. Find the volume.
Step 1: Identify the base area
Step 2: Multiply by height
Worked Example With a Triangular Prism
Base triangle:
Step 1: Compute the base area
Step 2: Multiply by the prism height
Worked Example With a Right Cylinder
A cylinder has radius 5 cm and height 8 cm.
Step 1: Compute the base area
Step 2: Multiply by height
Quick Check on Prism Volume Formula
A hexagonal prism has a base area of 54 cm² and a height of 7 cm.
What is the volume?
Think about it before advancing...
Answer to the Hexagonal Prism Check
The hexagonal base doesn't change the formula — still
The ACT may give unusual base shapes — just find
What Happens When Solids Taper to a Point
- A pyramid or cone has
the volume of the matching prism or cylinder - Same base, same height — but tapered
Worked Example With a Square Pyramid
A square pyramid has base edge 10 m and height 15 m.
Step 1: Compute the base area
Step 2: Apply the 1/3 rule
Worked Example With a Right Cone
A cone has radius 3 cm and height 8 cm.
Step 1: Compute the base area
Step 2: Apply the 1/3 rule
Quick Check on the One-Third Rule
A cylinder has
What fraction of the cylinder's volume is the cone?
Think about it...
Spheres: The Odd One Out
The sphere formula doesn't follow the
Example: A sphere with
Watch Out for the Diameter Trap
ACT twist: The problem gives diameter, not radius!
A sphere has diameter 10 cm. Find the volume.
Step 1: Convert to radius:
Step 2: Apply the formula
Quick Check on Sphere With Diameter
A sphere has diameter 8 cm. What is its volume?
Convert to radius first...
Complete Volume Formula Summary by Category
Memory aid: Does it taper to a point? Multiply by
ACT Practice Problems to Identify and Solve
Problem 1: A triangular prism has a right-triangle base with legs 3 and 4, and length 12. Find the volume.
Problem 2: A solid has a circular base with radius 5 and tapers to a point at height 9. Find the volume.
Identify the shape and formula before computing.
ACT Practice: Find the Missing Dimension
Problem 3: A cone has volume
Solutions to the ACT Practice Problems
Problem 1: Right triangle base →
Problem 2: Circular base + point = cone →
Problem 3:
Key Takeaways and Common Mistakes
- Full solids (prisms, cylinders):
- Pointed solids (pyramids, cones):
- Sphere:
Watch out:
- Pointed solid? Don't forget the
- Given diameter? Convert to radius first
- Always compute
as a separate step
Coming Up Next in Solid Geometry
Up next: Surface area of 3D figures
- Same five shapes — but now we're wrapping, not filling
- Lateral surface area vs. total surface area
- The slant height trap (different from regular height!)