lineal is the length board feet is 1ft wide X 1 ft long X 1 inch thick = 1 board foot
depends on which way ur looking at it
squared is when you multiply a number by itself... 6 squared is 6 X 6 = 36...so a 6 foot long board which is 6 feet wide is 36 square feet.
3 x 6 feet
The volume of a cube is the result of multiplying the three diminisions together. That would be 5 x 6 x 1 5 x 6 = 30 30 x 1 = 30 The volume of a cube 5 cm high, 6 cm long and 1 cm wide is 30 cubic cm.
1-1/2" x 7-1/4"
6"x 6" x 1" = 1 bd. ft.
lineal is the length board feet is 1ft wide X 1 ft long X 1 inch thick = 1 board foot
A board 1 inch thick and 12 inches square is 1 board foot. Any combination of these measurements is 1 board foot. A board 2 inches thick, 6 inches wide and 12 inches long is 1 board foot. For instance, to calculate the board feet in a beam that measures 6" wide x 8" high x 10' long the formula is 6x8x10/12=40 bf . Likewise, a 2"wide x 10" high x 10' long piece of lumber is calculated 2x10x10/12=16.66 bf. So a 1x12x12 would calculate 1x12x12/12=12 bf. All board footage is calculated on rough dimensions, so even though a 2x10 S4S measures only 1 1/2"x 9 1/4" the board footage is calculated by multiplying 2 times 10 times the length divided by 12.
If the longest side of 6 feet, and the narrowest side is 2 feet, then the area is 6 x 2 = 12 square feet.
depends on which way ur looking at it
3 x 6 feet
squared is when you multiply a number by itself... 6 squared is 6 X 6 = 36...so a 6 foot long board which is 6 feet wide is 36 square feet.
3 x 6 feet
The volume of a cube is the result of multiplying the three diminisions together. That would be 5 x 6 x 1 5 x 6 = 30 30 x 1 = 30 The volume of a cube 5 cm high, 6 cm long and 1 cm wide is 30 cubic cm.
a "2x6" board is actually 1 1/2" x5 1/2"
That depends on how wide your board is. A six inch wide board will need 25 x 25 x 2 (1250) linear feet to cover the area. A three inch wide board will need 25 x 25 x 4 (2500) linear feet to cover the area.