The answer will depend on the size of the real object. Every 4000 inches (333.33.. feet) of the real object will be 1 inch in the model.
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.
To find the actual length of the train, we can set up a proportion based on the scale. The model train is 35 inches long, and according to the scale, 7 inches corresponds to 90 feet. Therefore, we can calculate the actual length as follows: [ \text{Actual Length} = \left( \frac{90 , \text{feet}}{7 , \text{inches}} \right) \times 35 , \text{inches} = 450 , \text{feet}. ] Thus, the actual length of the train is 450 feet.
A 1:72 scale model means that every 1 unit of measurement on the model corresponds to 72 units in real life. For example, if the actual object is 72 inches long, the model would be 1 inch long. This scale is commonly used for aircraft, military vehicles, and figures, making it popular among hobbyists and collectors due to its manageable size and level of detail.
A 1:32 scale means that one unit of measurement on a model or replica represents 32 units of the same measurement in real life. For example, if a model car is 1:32 scale and measures 6 inches in length, the real car would be 16 feet long (6 inches x 32). This scale is commonly used for model vehicles, figures, and dioramas, allowing for detailed representation while still being manageable in size.
depends on what the item is. A car to that scale, for example, would be about 4.5 to 5 inches long.
48,000 inches!
6 inches is 1/2 foot, so (1/2 ft) / (30 ft) = 1/60, or it may be designated as 1:60 scale.
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.
To find the actual length of the train, we can set up a proportion based on the scale. The model train is 35 inches long, and according to the scale, 7 inches corresponds to 90 feet. Therefore, we can calculate the actual length as follows: [ \text{Actual Length} = \left( \frac{90 , \text{feet}}{7 , \text{inches}} \right) \times 35 , \text{inches} = 450 , \text{feet}. ] Thus, the actual length of the train is 450 feet.
A 1:32 scale means that one unit of measurement on a model or replica represents 32 units of the same measurement in real life. For example, if a model car is 1:32 scale and measures 6 inches in length, the real car would be 16 feet long (6 inches x 32). This scale is commonly used for model vehicles, figures, and dioramas, allowing for detailed representation while still being manageable in size.
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
for the 2000 model its 219 inches.
10 feet = 120 inches Scale is 120/2 = 60 to 1