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Depends on the size of the sheets of plywood.
The answer will depend on the size of the plywood sheet!
It depends upon which direction you put the plywood. You could use 4-8' lengths to cover the 32' by 11-4' lengths to cover the 43', cutting off 1 foot of the last row of sheets. That would be a total of 44 sheets. If you went the other direction, then it would take 8-4' lengths to cover the 32' and 6-8' lengths to cover the 43', cutting off 5' of the last row of sheets. This method would take a total of 48 sheets.
It would cost more & is not attractive.
512
The criteria given is vague. If we're talking about an existing piece of wood that we're cutting into ten pieces then it would take nine minutes, as the last piece would not require cutting! However, if we're talking about cutting ten pieces of wood off a bigger piece of wood, then it would take ten minutes.
1048576 2 to the power of 20 is 1048576
transverse and frontal
Lets say you have a 1 foot by 1 foot piece of plywood. Lets also say that your feet are 12 inches long and when both feet are together are 12 inches wide. Now if you stood on the plywood with both feet you would be distributing your weight over the entire 1 foot by 1 foot area (distributed loading). If you took the same piece of plywood and were able to apply all your weight through your finger and placed that somewhere in the plywood, that point would be loaded at that single point (point loading).
There is no definite temperature that plywood would combust at. Since plywood contains various chemicals, it will depend on what type those are, its size, etc.
No. Generally the face frame of a piece of furniture is made from solid wood.
Plywood. It has more trapped air.
plywood is something companies make so you would have to know what the plywood was made from and then find out what the genus and species name for that is
There are two primary reasons for the use of veneer in a woodworking project: strength and price. In the matter of strength, most veneered wood is a form of plywood. Plywood comes in a variety of strands (plys), from three-ply to laminated products of 20, 50, or 100+. The greater the ply, the stronger the product due to the cross-biased construction. As far as price, the cost of a piece of plywood with a rare wood face such as mahogany or rosewood is vastly lower than a piece of solid lumber. The face being 1/64th to 1/16th inch thick will show the same beautiful grain as a solid piece for a fraction of the cost, and the workability of plywood is negligibly the same as a solid piece of lumber.
I would buy some new plywood You will be able to bad plywood thru the shingles... especially 20 year shingles.
Depends on the size of the sheets of plywood.