300 mm = 0.300 meters and 450 mm = 0.450 meters. Therefore, the area of each tile in square meters is 0.300 X 0.450 = 0.135 square meters. Therefore, the smallest number of tiles that can cover an area of 13 square meters is 13/0.135 or at least 97 tiles.
3 and 1/3 Multiply 2 by 5 to find the area of the space, which is 10 square meters. Divide 10 by 3 to get 3 and 1/3.
35.
You would need 137 (136.23) 16" x 16" tiles to cover 22.5 square meters.
It will take nine 330 by 330 mm tiles to cover one square meter. The room is 144 square meters in area. 9X144=1296 tiles. With a 5mm grout.
84 m2 of course !
305.56
It requires 183 450x450mm tiles to cover 37 square meters of area. However this does not take into account waste. For laying ceramic tile on concrete the rule of thumb is to assume about 10% extra for waste, so you would need about 200 tiles.
20 ft= 6096 mm (6096 * 6096) / (450 * 450) = 183.512178 184 slabs
It depends on the shape of the 40m2. If it is 1m x 40m then, despite the area being 40m2, there is not a single 450mm x 450mm in it. The shape is simply not wide enough. But if you're allowed to cut up the slabs to make them fit, then you need 198 of them in order to cover 40 m2 of area.
0.6 x 0.3 = 0.18 square metres 5/0.18 = 27.78 tiles, or 28 if being practical
yes the area is 30 meters2 and the carpet is 5x5 meters which is 25 meters2 so it CAN fit. But I warn you, it will not be able to cover the whole floor.
It can cover 8 square metres or 86 square feet or 9.567 square yards.
If a single roll of wallpaper will cover three square meters it will take 3.1 rolls to cover a wall that is 2 meters x 5 meters. You will need 10 square meters of paper to cover this size wall.
first lets convert m to mm.we know, 1 m=1000 mm. 5 m =5000 mm and 8m=8000mm. Now, no.of paving slab = area of flags /area of slab . =5000 X8000/450 x 450. =197.5 = 197 slabs.
You can't convert meters to square meters.
A minimum of 11. That is the mathematical answer. In real life, the answer will depend on the shape of the area to be covered and, as a result, how many of the tiles need to be cut, how many of the offcuts can be used and so on.
It depends on what you are measuring in it but usually a multimeter will cover it.