A 2x12x12 foot board would not be measured in square feet but cubic feet and there would be 240 feet3
A board foot is a unit of volume, while a square foot is a unit of area. The two units are therefore incompatible.
To calculate the number of board feet needed for a 500 square foot ceiling using 1x6x12 tongue and groove boards, first determine the coverage of each board. A 1x6 board is typically 5.5 inches wide and 12 feet long, covering about 5.5 square feet. Therefore, for a 500 square foot ceiling, you would need approximately 91 boards (500 sq ft ÷ 5.5 sq ft/board). Each board is 1 board foot per linear foot, so the total board feet needed would be roughly 91 board feet.
12 feet x 16 feet = 192 square feet
No. They are quite different. They are the same only in the case of one square foot and one foot square. One square foot is a square, one foot on a side. Ten square feet is an area equal to ten of these square feet. Ten feet square is a square, ten feet per side. Ten square feet contains an area of ten square feet. Ten feet square contains an area of 100 square feet.
225 square feet
A board foot is a unit of volume, while a square foot is a unit of area. The two units are therefore incompatible.
None. Board foot is a measure of volume not area.
To find the square footage of an 8 by 16-foot board, you multiply the length by the width. So, 8 feet multiplied by 16 feet equals 128 square feet. Therefore, an 8 by 16-foot board has 128 square feet.
To calculate the total square footage of a 1x6x8 foot board, you first need to find the surface area of one side of the board. Since the board is 1 foot wide and 8 feet long, the area of one side is 1 x 8 = 8 square feet. Since there are two sides to the board, you would multiply the area of one side by 2 to get the total surface area of the board, which is 8 x 2 = 16 square feet.
well assuming you want the board feet and assuming it is a square you would multiply 8 by 5 and get - 40 square board feet
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, one board foot is equal to one square foot of lumber that's one inch thick. If you have 200 board feet, that's like having a stack of wood that's 200 square feet in area and one inch thick. So, the answer is 200 square feet. Easy peasy!
There is nine square feet on a 3 by 3 square board game.
To calculate the number of board feet needed for a 500 square foot ceiling using 1x6x12 tongue and groove boards, first determine the coverage of each board. A 1x6 board is typically 5.5 inches wide and 12 feet long, covering about 5.5 square feet. Therefore, for a 500 square foot ceiling, you would need approximately 91 boards (500 sq ft ÷ 5.5 sq ft/board). Each board is 1 board foot per linear foot, so the total board feet needed would be roughly 91 board feet.
30,000 board feet. Today $350 per thousand board feet, it will cost $10,500.
It depends on the exposure. If you are lapping each board 1 1/4" you have a 6" exposure. This would give 6 square feet coverage per board, and would take 17 boards to cover 100 square eet (1 square) Exposure (in feet) * Length = Square foot of coverage per board 1 square = 100 square feet
A linear foot is distance. A square foot is area. One square foot is the area of some square tiles used on floors. Ten square feet is 1 foot x 10 feet or 2 feet x 5 feet. Don't confuse this with a 10 foot square which is 10 feet by 10 feet which equals 100 square feet.
First, calculate the area of one board: a 6-inch by 8-foot board has an area of 6 inches (0.5 feet) by 8 feet, which equals 4 square feet. To cover 300 square feet, divide 300 by 4, resulting in 75 boards needed. Therefore, you will need 75 boards to cover 300 square feet.