To determine how many 12x24 tiles you need for a 26 square foot area, first calculate the area of one tile. A 12x24 tile is 2 square feet (12 inches x 24 inches = 288 square inches; 288 square inches ÷ 144 = 2 square feet). To cover 26 square feet, divide 26 by 2, resulting in 13 tiles. Therefore, you would need 13 tiles to cover the area.
A 12x24 tile is 2 square feet. There are 120 tiles that would be needed.
1500 tiles
You will need at least 66,828 1/4 tiles to cover that area.
To determine how many tiles you need for a 168 square foot area, you first need to know the size of each tile. For example, if each tile is 1 square foot, you would need 168 tiles. If the tiles are smaller, such as 1 square foot, you would calculate the area of each tile and divide 168 by that area to find the total number of tiles required.
Assuming you mean 16x16 inches tiles... 441 tiles would cover the area exactly
A 12x24 tile is 2 square feet. There are 120 tiles that would be needed.
1500 tiles
Each tile will cover 2 square feet. So you will need 12.5 tiles.
You multiply the width by the length to get the area. In this case the answer would be 288 square feet in the yard.
52, assuming no waste. 12" x 24" =2 sq. ft. divided into 104 sq. ft. = 52
You will need at least 66,828 1/4 tiles to cover that area.
To determine how many tiles you need for a 168 square foot area, you first need to know the size of each tile. For example, if each tile is 1 square foot, you would need 168 tiles. If the tiles are smaller, such as 1 square foot, you would calculate the area of each tile and divide 168 by that area to find the total number of tiles required.
Assuming you mean 16x16 inches tiles... 441 tiles would cover the area exactly
You would need a total of 89 tiles (88.88 tiles exactly) with those measurements to cover that area.
You would need 29 tiles of that size to cover that area (28.77 tiles) to be precise,
You would need a total of 36 tiles to cover that area.
It depends on the units used to measure the tile: 12inch*24inch, 12cm*24cm or some other, unspecified unit.