Use a saw.
18 pieces. 48 / 16 = 3 72 / 12 = 6 6 * 3 = 18 pieces
10,560
In order for there to be equal pieces, the length of the pieces must be factors of both the length of the ribbon and the object. Thus, there are actually many answers. For example: 2,4,6,8, and 16 inch pieces both work.
It's the length of each piece, if you cut up one inch into ten equal pieces.
6 if you cut it the right way. To figure it out: the total area of the cover paper is 20x26 inches or 520 in2. Each 8x10 inch paper has an area of 80 in2. So dividing 520 by 80 = 6.5. Since you wanted whole sheets of 8x10 the most you can cut from the cover paper is 6.
18 pieces. 48 / 16 = 3 72 / 12 = 6 6 * 3 = 18 pieces
Depends on how big you cut the pieces. If you cut 2x2 inch pieces, a 12x18 cake will yield 54 servings.
You need to cut a 9 foot piece of plywood into 12 inch sections. Every cut also removes 1/8 inch. How many 12 inch sections can you get out of the 9 foot piece of plywood?
exactly 20 of them
Five. Anything cut into fifths will produce five pieces.
12
51 pieces of 2 inch lengths adds up to 102 inches. These cannot be cut from a strip which is only 66 inches long.
12
Number of pieces crosswise = 4 ft / 8 inches = 48 inches / 8 inches = 6 Number of pieces lengthwise = 8 ft / 20 inches = 96 inches / 20 inches = 3 So, total number of pieces = 6*3 = 18.
Set up your saw horses. Lay a couple or three of 2x2's or 2x4's on the horses. Lay the plywood or sheet goods face down (good side down), mark where you want your cuts, set your blade depth on your circular saw slightly deeper than the sheet is thick, make sure the sheet dropping won't pinch off your blade at the end of the cut, and start sawing.
The size of the whole thing doesn't matter. If you cut it into more pieces, then each piece has to be smaller. And if you cut it into fewer pieces, than the pieces are bigger.
cutting holes in paneling weather its plasterboard etc.