Use something like Duct Tape to make a backing and fill the hole as much as possible with this. The use a putty knife to get the stucco material in the hole and to cover it, going up and down and side to side. You can then immediately paint over the patched spot, no need to wait on it to dry!
well yeah it can help, not make the house look alot better.😊
Preferably you cut and fit a patch of drywall. I always do that for holes and gaps over 1/2 inch.
An inch is a unit of measurement. It has no diameter.
A circle with a 12 inch diameter has a 6 inch radius.
12 inch diameter(also 6 inch radius).
An inch is an inch is an inch is an inch....
the 25-inch-diameter
Contary to popular belief, 'duct' tape is not for fixing broken furnace ducts. It was originally developed for sealing the joints between duct sections, and is a poor substitute for properly riviting the sections together. If you have a large leak in a duct section, you might consider replacing the whole section rather than trying to patch it. If the leak is only a few inches in diameter, cut a piece of sheet metal about the same thickness as the metal of the duct, drill holes 1/8 inch in diameter around the perimeter of this piece, and then lay it on the duct. Using a marker of some sort, mark a few of the holes at one end of the patch, and drill the duct with the same 1/8 inch drill. Using a pop riveting tool, pop rivet the patch to the duct. Work from one end of the patch toward the other, never drilling more than 2 or 3 holes at a time before riveting them. Otherwise, the patch will end up not aligning with the holes that you have drilled, and you will have to make more holes in the duct. If the patch must go over an irregular surface, like an elbow, you may need to use silicone sealant to seal the spaces between the rivets.Be careful when drilling the duct that you do not press hard on the drill, as it could cause the duct to collapse. If you do not have any of the tools needed to perform this repair, consider calling a heating and air conditioning specialist.AnswerIt depends on what is wrong with the duct. Could you be more specific?
Less than an inch.
Three 0.50 inch diameter pipes will fit into one 1.50 inch diameter pipe (hypothetically). The 0.50 inch diameters stack on top of each other until you have 1.50 inches!
17 inch diameter rim versus 16 inch diameter rim
A 59.5-inch diameter cylinder holds 1,733 gallons per inch of length/height.