One inch on the model represents 72 inches -- or six feet -- on the real McCoy. Since the miniature is two inches long, the actual airplane it represents is 12 feet long.
depends on what the item is. A car to that scale, for example, would be about 4.5 to 5 inches long.
10 feet is 120 inches so if this is represented by 8 inches on a drawing the scale is 1:15
3in
N
6 inches is 1/2 foot, so (1/2 ft) / (30 ft) = 1/60, or it may be designated as 1:60 scale.
48,000 inches!
It depends on what the original model was. If the original model was 100 inches, then a 1/50th scale would be 2 inches.
N scale is only about 4.8 inches in length and about 1.1 inches in height, depending on which piece of equipment you are measuring. Some N scale engines are 6 inches long and a caboose may be less than 2 inches long. The question is a bit vague, but N scale is 1/160th the size of the prototype trains.
One inch on the model represents 72 inches -- or six feet -- on the real McCoy. Since the miniature is two inches long, the actual airplane it represents is 12 feet long.
depends on what the item is. A car to that scale, for example, would be about 4.5 to 5 inches long.
10 feet is 120 inches so if this is represented by 8 inches on a drawing the scale is 1:15
3in
10 feet = 120 inches Scale is 120/2 = 60 to 1
15
for the 2000 model its 219 inches.
about 5 and a quarter inches long.. 5.25