When a solid is enlarged or reduced by a scale factor \(k\), its volume scales by the cube of that factor:
\[ V' = k^3 V \]
where \(V\) is the original volume and \(V'\) is the new volume.
Look for enlargement or reduction problems where two similar 3D shapes are compared, often cones, spheres, pyramids, or cuboids.
Volume scales by the cube of the scale factor. Double the scale factor, volume increases eightfold; halve it, volume reduces to one-eighth.