Sorry, more information is needed: Is the area 26X10, or maybe 8X32.5? -It is best to lay this out on paper, to determine which way you want to orient your sheets. That way, you can see which way will use the least number of sheets.
Standard plywood is sized at 4 x 8 feet (48 x 96 inches), however plywood comes in a variety of sizes. Below are a few other standard sizes:
4' x 6', 4' x 7', 4' x 8', 4' x 10', & 4' x 12'
5' x 6', 5' x 8', 5' x 10', & 5' x 12'
And, in the following standard thicknesses:
1/8", 1/4", 3/8", 1/2", 5/8", 3/4", 1", 1-1/8" 1-1/4", & 1-1/2"
Nonstandard sizes of plywood can typically be special ordered as well for special purposes.
Plywood is usually an odd number of plys if veneer or solid core sheets. These range from 3-ply to well up to 15-ply. However, not all plywood is veneered. Some examples of nonveneer plywoods are MDF, Flakeboard, and fiberboard. A relatively new product called FSC Corrugated plywood is being manufactured by Corelam; one form of it looks much the same as corrugated cardboard.
MDF, Flakeboard and fiberboard are not plywoods at all, they are forms of chipboard. -Any plywood has plies (layers) -they don't
um tell me if im wrong but im pretty sure its 4 x 8
They really ARE four feet by eight feet at the point of sale to you, the customer.
plywood is primarily named to its actual size (it really will measure 48"x96") however its thickness is nominal (meaning 1\2 " really means something smaller)
3/4 inch plywood takes 48 sheets to make a unit.
32 square ft
It's usually by weight, 2400lbs. Could be anywhere from 40 to 80.
3/4 inch plywood takes 48 sheets to make a unit.
Anywhere from 60 or 66. Depends on the mill it came from
Plywood is made up of many different layers. These individual layers are called "piles" or "veneers".
That depends on the thickness of the plywood. If it's 3/4 then anywhere from 46 to 52 depending on the manufacture. Generally 48, again different thicknesses have a different count in the unit.
348 x 0.25 = 87
$5000
0.0099 per sheet.
0.99¢ per sheet
Density is a material's density is defined as its mass per unit volume.
0.99¢ per sheet
A ml is one unit, so 15 units of them would make 15 ml.
A ream is a fixed unit of measure, currently set at 500 sheets of paper. At one time it was 480. A printer's ream is 516 sheets.