Things You'll Need
Instructions
Water Displacement Method
Place a cup in a clean, empty bowl and fill the cup to the brim with water.
Drop the egg whose volume you want to measure into the cup. It will sink to the bottom, and water will spill out of the cup and into the bowl.
Pour the water from the bowl into a measuring cup. The volume of water that you collect equals the volume of the egg.
Mathematical Calculation
Measure the width of the egg at its widest point with a ruler or caliper, divide that measurement in half and label that number as R. This is the radius of the minor axis of both ellipsoids that form the egg. Mark the point on the egg at which you took this measurement, using a pencil.
Measure the length of the egg and divide this length into two, using the mark you made as the dividing point. Call the longer length L and the shorter length S.
Consider the egg as a pair of intersecting ellipsoids. One ellipsoid has radii R, R and L, and the other has radii R, R and S. The formula for the volume of the first ellipsoid is 4/3̶6;pi̶6;R̶6;R̶6;L, but the egg contains only half that ellipsoid, so divide by two. Similarly, the volume of the second half of the egg is 4/3̶6;pi̶6;R̶6;R̶6;S divided by two. Pi is a constant that equals approximately 3.14.
Fill in the values for R, L and S in the following formula to find the volume of the egg: 2/3̶6;pi̶6;R̶6;R̶6;(L + S). An egg with a width of two inches (W = one inch) and lengths one inch and 1.5 inches therefore has a volume of 5.233 cubic inches.