Roughly 43-44 boards for the ideal deck. However, it will depend on the shape of the deck, and spaces between supports.
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The term lineal meter is used to describe the nominal length of an item. For example carpet maybe produced on a loom perhaps 4m wide. A lineal meter of carpet would be 1m long x 4m wide. Thus 4 lineal meters of this particular carpet would cover 16 square meters. In a similar fashion timber is often sold by the lineal meter which describes the cost per meter of length of the board. The board would have a width and if you were to the purchase timber to build a deck you would need to calculate the number of lengths of boards to cover the area of deck having taken into account the width of the board. When ordering you would ask for X lineal meters of the particular board. Obviously its important to know the particular specifications of the material you intend to use. For example not all carpet is produced on a 4m loom and so it is important to understand the effect of substituting different materials so that a material shortage or wastage does not occur.
Well there are 52 cards in a full deck. There are four 3's in a full deck, so the probilitiy of selecting of 3 out of a deck would be 4/52.. so the odds are 1 out of 13 OR 7.69%
cm
Add the height of the pool to the 15' width of the pool. Then add the width of the deck to the 24' length of the pool to obtain the right measurement.
That would make a bad deck, considering all that would require too many Tributes