0.8 = 8/10 on a ruler
See if you can find a part of the ruler where there are 9 little marks between the inch divisions: that section of the ruler may be marked as "10ths" or "TENTHS". Each of the gaps between these marks is 0.1 inch so you want 8 gaps.
It's between 9/16 and 5/8
1/8 = 2/16 = 4/32 = 8/64
They denote different fractions of the inch. A good engineers ruler will have 64 ths, 32 nds 16 ths and 8 ths at least.
0.8 = 8/10 on a ruler
See if you can find a part of the ruler where there are 9 little marks between the inch divisions: that section of the ruler may be marked as "10ths" or "TENTHS". Each of the gaps between these marks is 0.1 inch so you want 8 gaps.
2.625 is the same as 2 and 5/8 which can be found on a ruler if it has 1/8 of an inch on it
An 8 mm mass is roughly one third of an inch. If you look at a ruler, this will give you a good idea of the size of such a mass. There are 2.54 cm or 25.4 mm in one inch. Therefore, 8 mm is just shy of 1/3 inch.
3.875 is the same as 3 and 7/8 inches on a ruler
1/8 = 2/16 = 4/32 = 8/64
It's between 9/16 and 5/8
It's almost exactly 11/32" (a little under 3/8"). There is no one-third of an inch on the ruler; only halves, quarters, eighths, and sixteenths. One-third of an inch is about .85 centimeters.
They denote different fractions of the inch. A good engineers ruler will have 64 ths, 32 nds 16 ths and 8 ths at least.
well its definitely between the 8" mark and the 7.75" mark
13/16 is between 3/4 and 7/8
On a 12 inch ruler, the 1/3 point would be 12/3, or at 4 inches.