2m x 5m = 10 sq. m.
Depends how big insulation rolls are.
Rolls or bread rolls.
6.5 percent
100*14/400 = 3.5%
The total number of rolls, R, is R = 5p + 3
If a single roll of wallpaper will cover three square meters it will take 3.1 rolls to cover a wall that is 2 meters x 5 meters. You will need 10 square meters of paper to cover this size wall.
34344
The number of rolls needed depends on the size of each roll. Measure the dimensions of a single roll and calculate how many square meters it covers. Then divide the total area (55 sq meters) by the coverage area of one roll to determine the number of rolls needed.
3 and 1/3 Multiply 2 by 5 to find the area of the space, which is 10 square meters. Divide 10 by 3 to get 3 and 1/3.
It depends on the length and width of the wallpaper.
12 linear metres into rolls?
One, if it is long enough.
The room is 264 square feet and adding 10% for pattern match cutting etc then you need 6 rolls
form_title= Self Adhesive Wallpaper form_header= Make installing wallpaper a cinch. How many rolls do you need? What color wallpaper do you want?*= _[50] When do you need the wallpaper?*= _[50]
Assuming a maximum precision, you only have to use 25(10)/50 = 250/50 = 5 rolls.
I can't answer that question because wallpaper that has a pattern in it has a "repeat" which is the number of inches of pattern before the pattern starts over again. When hanging the paper, you have to make sure your strips line up in the right way so that the pattern flows from one strip of wallpaper to the next and you don't see the lines or disruption of pattern. You have to calculate how much paper you waste - the larger the repeat (I've seen then as big as 24"), the more rolls you need.
From the info I have from a sod supplier: each roll is 10sqft, there are 70 rolls on a pallet, so covers 700sqft