It takes six 1 sq. ft. tiles to cover up a 2 ft. by 3 ft. space.
15 tiles exactly.
12 inches = 1 foot Thus the tiles would be 1 foot square. You therefore need 30 to cover a 30 square foot room.
Assuming the tiles are 1 foot squares, you would need 10*15 = 150 tiles.
If the tiles are 1 x 1 FOOT, then they cover 118 square feet.If the tiles are 1 x 1 INCH, then they cover (118/144) = 0.8194 square foot (rounded)If the tiles are 1 x 1 METER, then they cover (118 x 3.280842) = 1,270.1 square feet (rounded)
Depends on how big the tiles are.
A 12 x 12 tile is measured in inches, right? So, 12 inches is 1 foot, meaning each tile covers 1 square foot of space. With 234 tiles, you would cover 234 square feet of space.
It takes six 1 sq. ft. tiles to cover up a 2 ft. by 3 ft. space.
15 tiles exactly.
12 inches = 1 foot Thus the tiles would be 1 foot square. You therefore need 30 to cover a 30 square foot room.
Assuming the tiles are 1 foot squares, you would need 10*15 = 150 tiles.
It depends on the size of the tiles and also, to some extent, on the shape of the area that you need to cover.
If the tiles are 1 x 1 FOOT, then they cover 118 square feet.If the tiles are 1 x 1 INCH, then they cover (118/144) = 0.8194 square foot (rounded)If the tiles are 1 x 1 METER, then they cover (118 x 3.280842) = 1,270.1 square feet (rounded)
In practice you will use more tiles than the equivalent area of the room. A 15 foot strip of tiles will require 15 times 12/13 = 13.846 tiles to cover it. This will have to be rounded to 14 tiles. That means that the 15 foot by 15 foot room will require 14 times 14 tiles = 196 tiles to cover it. And that's if you don't drop and break any or mess up one or more cuts.
80
A square foot is 12" x 12" space. You have 4 ea of 6"x6" tiles in a square foot.
Since a 12" x 12" tile is exactly one square foot, the answer should be obvious.