11 tiles.
5.5
how many 300x300 mm tiles in a square metre
300 mm = 0.300 meter and 600 mm = 0.600 meter. The area in meters of each tile is therefore 0.300 X 0.600 = 0.180 square meter. The number of tiles require to total 1 square meter therefore is 1/0.180 = about 5.5. Therefore, no integral number of tiles will exactly fill the specified space, and no more than five will fit. If the 1 square meter has a very long and narrow shape, narrower than 0.300 meter, no tiles at all will fit.
9 square foot tiles make one square yard
2500 tiles
Ah, what a lovely question! To find out how many 60cm x 30cm tiles are in a square meter, we first need to convert the measurements to meters. Since 1 meter is equal to 100cm, the tile is 0.6m x 0.3m. To cover a square meter, you would need to divide 1m by the area of one tile (0.6m x 0.3m), which equals 5 tiles. Happy tiling!
11 tiles.
45.55
Depends on the size of the tiles.
5.5
how many 300x300 mm tiles in a square metre
300 mm = 0.300 meter and 600 mm = 0.600 meter. The area in meters of each tile is therefore 0.300 X 0.600 = 0.180 square meter. The number of tiles require to total 1 square meter therefore is 1/0.180 = about 5.5. Therefore, no integral number of tiles will exactly fill the specified space, and no more than five will fit. If the 1 square meter has a very long and narrow shape, narrower than 0.300 meter, no tiles at all will fit.
9 square foot tiles make one square yard
That depends on the unit of measurement for the tiles. Assuming the tiles are 18 inches by 18 inches, one tile is 324 square inches = 2.25 square feet. Multiply by 106 to get 238.5 square feet. If the tiles are 18 feet by 18 feet (pretty big tiles, but hey, it could happen), one tile is 324 square feet, so 106 pieces of that would be 34344 square feet.
You would need 25 (5x5).
It will take nine 330 by 330 mm tiles to cover one square meter. The room is 144 square meters in area. 9X144=1296 tiles. With a 5mm grout.