You can't convert that. You can only convert units that measure the same type of thing - for example, units of length to units of length, units of mass to units of mass, units of time to units of time, etc.
It doesn't make sense to convert that. You can only convert units of the same kind, e.g., units of length to units of length; units of area to units of area; units of time to units of time, etc.
mass, length and time are the basic measurement units
The answers depend on the tool with which you measure the width and length: W and L units. Find the smallest unit you can measure with the tool, e units. Then maximum width = W + e/2 units, minimum width = W - e/2 units, maximum length = L + e/2 units, minimum length = L - e/2 units.
The length, width, or height of a solid figure is measured in units of length. The area of the figure's outside surfaces is measured in squared units of length. The volume of space filled by the figure is measured in cubed units of length. The mass of the figure is measured in units of mass. The weight of the object is measured in units of force. The age of the figure is measured in units of time. etc.
For length Meter and for time Second.
You can't convert that. You can only convert units that measure the same type of thing - for example, units of length to units of length, units of mass to units of mass, units of time to units of time, etc.
It doesn't make sense to convert that. You can only convert units of the same kind, e.g., units of length to units of length; units of area to units of area; units of time to units of time, etc.
The fundamental SI units for mass, length, and time are kilograms, meters, and seconds, respectively.
Length: Measured using units such as meters or inches to determine the extent of an object from one point to another. Weight: Measured using units such as kilograms or pounds to determine the mass of an object or person. Time: Measured using units such as seconds, minutes, or hours to quantify the duration of an event or activity.
I suggest you search for some examples to get the general idea. Basically, you convert all units to generic descriptions such as [length], [time], [current], etc.; then you combine them. If you add a length to another length, you get a length again, so: [length] + [length] = [length] Similarly, [length] - [length] = [length] Please note that: 1) This is different from regular addition or subtraction. 2) You can't add or subtract different types of units. For example, if in a formula you are supposed to add a speed and an acceleration, you get: speed + acceleration = [length] / [time] + [length] / [time]2 ... which can't be added. If you get something like this, something is wrong with this formula. Such formulae might be used as "rule-of thumb" formulae, and might sometimes give good approximations - but they are not dimensionally correct. On the other hand, if you multiply or divide units in a calculation, you get the regular product or quotient, for example: [length] times [length] = [length] squared.
By the fixture units connected and the developed length of piping and fitting
Mass, length, and time are considered fundamental units because they are independent and cannot be derived from other physical quantities. These three fundamental units serve as the building blocks for the International System of Units (SI) and form the basis for measuring other physical quantities.
mass, length and time are the basic measurement units
The answers depend on the tool with which you measure the width and length: W and L units. Find the smallest unit you can measure with the tool, e units. Then maximum width = W + e/2 units, minimum width = W - e/2 units, maximum length = L + e/2 units, minimum length = L - e/2 units.
The length, width, or height of a solid figure is measured in units of length. The area of the figure's outside surfaces is measured in squared units of length. The volume of space filled by the figure is measured in cubed units of length. The mass of the figure is measured in units of mass. The weight of the object is measured in units of force. The age of the figure is measured in units of time. etc.
Area is measured by length time width. The calculation gives you 117 square units.