Its is taken standard as 2*pitch circle diameter - 3**pitch circle diameter for cast teeth.
3 *pitch circle diameter - 4 *pitch circle diameter for cut teeth.
Pitch circle diameter = PI*module
regards,
Pranav
You cannot, without information about the width.
It is not possible to calculate weight just from length, width and/or height. (These can give you volume and area, but not weight). For weight, you need to know "how heavy it is per this amount of stuff" is - e.g "3 grams per square cm" or "6 tonnes per inch".
The mass of paper is usually given as grams per squaremetre. You still need to provide the width to calculate the mass, and from there to calculate the weight.
you figure lengtH TIMES WIDTH TIMES heigth then add material cost per foot
u do distance/ time= speed
You cannot, without information about the width.
It is not possible to calculate weight just from length, width and/or height. (These can give you volume and area, but not weight). For weight, you need to know "how heavy it is per this amount of stuff" is - e.g "3 grams per square cm" or "6 tonnes per inch".
The mass of paper is usually given as grams per squaremetre. You still need to provide the width to calculate the mass, and from there to calculate the weight.
Per Ove Width was born in 1939.
you figure lengtH TIMES WIDTH TIMES heigth then add material cost per foot
Following informations are required to calculate weight. 1) ends per cm and picks per cm 2) fabric width 3)warp and weft crimp % 4)warp and weft yarn count.
u do distance/ time= speed
Standard is 24" width per person at a dinning table.
First you should calculate paper cost (height X width X gsm(grams per sq mtr)) / 1550 = weight of 1 sheet (in grams) then you can calculate total sheets cost then printing.............................
Muptily the height x width then subtract any window or door opening using the same height x width method. This should give you a close per gallon needed based on the coverage of the paint.
grams per square metre * 1.323868 = grams per yard @ 57 inch width.
Weigh the material in pounds. Then measure the length, width and height. Do this in feet. Calculate the volume by multiplying length x width x height = Volume. Volume = length x width x height Divide the weight by the volume: Weight / Volume Density = Weight / Volume Your density is in units of lbs per cubic foot