a foot measure at clarks is wat they usually do
A lineal foot is the same as a foot. It is a measure of length and has no width at all.
I don't know. Measure it.
When you go to shoe store, they have this feet measurement. It measures both your shoe length and width.
When you multiply length times width in feet, you have square feet.
a foot measure at clarks is wat they usually do
YAY! (=
A lineal foot is the same as a foot. It is a measure of length and has no width at all.
inches
I don't know. Measure it.
When you go to shoe store, they have this feet measurement. It measures both your shoe length and width.
When you multiply length times width in feet, you have square feet.
An inch is roughly the width of your thumb at the base, while a foot is approximately the length of an adult's foot.
To calculate running feet, simply measure the length of an object in feet. If the object has a width, multiply the width by the length to get the total square footage, then divide by the width to get the running feet. For example, a 10 ft long object with a width of 2 ft would be 20 running feet.
A Brannock device is commonly used in shoe stores to measure foot size. It consists of a metal foot plate with sliding rulers to measure length, width, and arch length.
Dorso-palmar balance refers to the "front to back" balance of the hoof. So, when you are looking at the sole of the foot, the dorsal edge is the toe, and the palmar edge is the back of the heels. A hoof with healthy dorso-palmar balance will have approximately 1/3 of the foot in front of the widest part of the hoof (really from the point of breakover to the widest part of the foot, not the very edge of the toe -- which should NOT be the point of breakover!), and 2/3 behind that point.
Measure the length X width of each floor and add them together.