2 feet=24inches, and there are four 0.25 inch segments in every inch. Since 24 x 4 = 96, the scale of 0.25"=2' is 96:1 (ninety six to one)
1 to 16.
One-fortyeighth
8
all you have to do is put 1 inch over 9 feet. Example : 1/9
It is 2" to 10 ft = 2"/120" = 1/60
One-fortyeighth
1 to 16.
8
all you have to do is put 1 inch over 9 feet. Example : 1/9
It is 2" to 10 ft = 2"/120" = 1/60
To find the scale factor of the drawing, first convert the actual length from feet to inches since the drawing's length is in inches. There are 12 inches in a foot, so 8 feet equals 96 inches. The scale factor can then be calculated by dividing the drawing length (4 inches) by the actual length (96 inches), resulting in a scale factor of 1:24. This means that 1 inch on the drawing represents 24 inches in reality.
To convert 4 feet on a scale of 1:10, you multiply the actual measurement by the scale factor. In this case, 4 feet equals 48 inches (since 1 foot = 12 inches). Therefore, 48 inches on a 1:10 scale would be represented as 4.8 inches on the model.
Convert to same units, then can cancel out units: 1 ft = 12 in → 1 in : 4 ft = 1 in : 4 x 12 in = 1 in : 48 in = 1 : 48 So the scale factor is 48.
To find the actual height of the tree, you can multiply the height in the drawing by the scale factor. Since the scale is one inch to 32 feet, you would calculate 6 inches × 32 feet/inch, which equals 192 feet. Therefore, the actual height of the tree is 192 feet.
1/84
144:1.
To find the scale factor, first convert the actual length from feet to inches since the drawing's measurement is in inches. There are 12 inches in a foot, so 8 feet is equal to 96 inches (8 feet × 12 inches/foot). The scale factor is then calculated by dividing the drawing length by the actual length: ( \text{Scale Factor} = \frac{4 \text{ inches}}{96 \text{ inches}} = \frac{1}{24} ). Thus, the scale factor is 1:24.