54 in ge
To cover a 10ft by 12ft floor, you can use various types of tiles including ceramic, porcelain, vinyl, or natural stone tiles. The total area of the floor is 120 square feet, so you'll need enough tiles to cover this area based on the size of the individual tiles. For example, if using 12x12 inch tiles, you'd need 120 tiles, while larger 24x24 inch tiles would require 30 tiles. Always consider purchasing extra tiles to account for cutting and waste.
Any.
Since there are no units given it is not possible to answer the question. The units used for measuring the tiles must be different from those used for the room.
Two and Four are both common denominators of Four and Eight, therefore either of these can be used. You would need only two 4ft square tiles or eight 2ft square tiles to cover the 4ft x 8ft floor.
A 12*12 sq inch tile has an area of 1 square foot. So, to cover 20 sq ft you will require a minimum of 20 tiles. I say "minimum" because the actual number depends on the shape of the area to be covered and whether or not all offcuts can be used.
To cover a 10ft by 12ft floor, you can use various types of tiles including ceramic, porcelain, vinyl, or natural stone tiles. The total area of the floor is 120 square feet, so you'll need enough tiles to cover this area based on the size of the individual tiles. For example, if using 12x12 inch tiles, you'd need 120 tiles, while larger 24x24 inch tiles would require 30 tiles. Always consider purchasing extra tiles to account for cutting and waste.
it would be 81 tiles
the ansewr is 54
Any.
Since there are no units given it is not possible to answer the question. The units used for measuring the tiles must be different from those used for the room.
yes, 6x6 of them
Two and Four are both common denominators of Four and Eight, therefore either of these can be used. You would need only two 4ft square tiles or eight 2ft square tiles to cover the 4ft x 8ft floor.
Area = L x W : 14X16 = 224 SF. Typically you would add 7-10% for breakage & cuts, sometimes adding more depending on the material being used and the pattern being installed. A pattern requiring many cuts (i.e. diagonal, staggered, hopscotch) you may want to add 10-12%, more if natural stone. Also, use Square Footage to purchase materials, not the amount of tiles. Why? A 12X12 is not necessarily a 12X12; some are bigger, some are smaller. Some sizes can get confusing with overseas manufacturing. European tiles are typically Metric, so a 30X30 may really be 30X30 cm, but that's a little smaller than 12X12 in standard measurements.
copper wiring would be best for heating floor tiles.
36 tiles. I would hire a tiler if I was you, this doesn't sound like your 'thing'
Asbestos was last used in floor tiles in the late 1980s before being largely discontinued due to health concerns linked to asbestos exposure. Since then, alternative materials have been used in the production of floor tiles.
The term you are looking for is probably tessellation.