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It's the vertical face that runs between the back of one step and the front of the one above it.
Step lengthThe "riser" is about seven (7) inches. The depth of the step is about seven to eight. There is a formula for calculating the number of steps one should have for a particular height -- 8 foot , 10 foot, and the like.Stairs are built on a "7-11" risers being approx. 7" and the tread being approx. 11" this gives you the divisable start to your actual seperation.
Try a Shifted 2: 8" HOW? I'm unable to do this correctly. Please give step-by-step. Thanks.
Three parts of a step: Rise, Run and Width Width determined by use. Step 1 - Determine number of steps Best Rise for steps is 6-8 1/4 inches. Divide total rise (height of climb) by 7. This is comfortable average step height. Round off number to integer (can't have fractional steps) Step 2 - Determine actual Rise Divide total rise by number of steps from Step 1. This is your actual rise. Step 3 - Determine Run Two Formulas 1) Rise plus the Run should equal ap­proximately 17.5 inches. 2) Two times the Rise plus the Run should equal between 24 and 25 inches With 7 inch rise: Formula 1 - 17.5 minus 7 gives Run of 10.5 inches Formula 2 - 24.5 minus 14 gives Run of 10.5 inches ********************** Answer Measure how high the step need to be, say 4 ft. high. decide how high you want each step to be. Say 6 inches to make it easy. Devide the number of inches in each step into the total height. to raise 4 ft. you would need 8 steps. 6 inches into 48 inches goes 8 times. Height of step can be anything, an odd amount, 6 and 3/4, 7 and 1/4 whatever it takes to make them come out even. Use a framing square to lay out the stair on a 2x12 long enough. Again, using a 6 inch rise and a 10 inch wide step for example. On the top edge of the 2x12 take the framing , hold it in front of you with you being on the inside of the angle. The 2x12 is in front of you. The edge of the board closest to you is the top. On the outside edge of the square, put the right hand side at 10 inches and the left hand side at 6 inches and mark the outside of the square. Move the square up the board and put the 10 inch mark at the top of the 6 inch mark you just made and mark it again. Continue this till enough steps are marked. Square the top and bottom to fit the ground and the porch you are attaching to. I hope this is clear enough, it's easier to show than it is to explain.
About the length of a step, by an adult. If you are accustomed to feet, etc., a meter is slightly more than a yard. To be precise, an inch is 0.0254 meters, so a foot is 0.3048 meters.
The stringers for stairs are cut with a 7 inch riser and a eleven inch tread. Once all the framing and trim work is done you end up with six and a quarter inch high step.
The tread is what you step on, the riser is the part going up. Rise=riserThe tread is what you step on. The riser is the upright piece your toe hits.
The riser
Waka flacka. you do not step on the riser
6.5 inches
It's the vertical face that runs between the back of one step and the front of the one above it.
Aka: riser card. A riser card is a circuit board containing expansion slot(s) which allows expansion card(s) to be re-oriented and/or moved to another position relative to the motherboard. A typical riser card rotates an expansion card/slot through 90 degrees so that the card/slot is parallel to the motherboard. A riser card may be used to: - Rotate an expansion card through 90 degrees to face left or face right. - Shiftposition of an expansion card up and/or sideways.
you step on the TREADThe RISER holds the treads-- the riser is the zig / zag part where the treads lay on.The riser backboard is the face plate you see as you walk up the stairs and your toes hit on.The Knewal is the post at the top or the bottom of the banister / railingThe ballistars are the poles that are placed under the railing that follow from top to bottom.
High Step was created in 1975.
Installing carpet on wooden stairs by yourself: Step 1: Install Tackless Strips. Step 2: Install the Padding. Step 3: Trim Carpet to Size. Step 4: Crease the Carpet Runner. Step 5: Position and Attach the Runner. Step 6: Staple the Riser. Step 7: Tuck the Carpet Into the Corner. Step 8: Straighten the Runner's Edges.
Measure from the nose and the top of the tread of the plumb up the wall 34' to 36'
Granted, building a deck step by step is a lot of work, but a simple deck can be built by the homeowner and a willing partner. They have to know which tools to use and they have to provide enough support for the deck so that it doesn't eventually collapse. The trickiest part of deck building will probably be making the steps. The riser and tread spacing have to be equal from top to bottom. If they're even a fraction of an inch off it can cause people to stumble. Unless they're very confident, the homeowner might want to leave building the steps to a professional carpenter.