Since three bundles are required to cover 100 sq feet. (based on three tab organic shingles) and each package holds 21 shingles, then the result is 63 shingles, four nails per shingle, or 252 nails. Add about 10% for items such as trim and you shouldn't be far wrong
three Typically three, but it depends on the shingles, some heavier 50 yr shingles come 4 bundles do to there added weight.
three Typically three, but it depends on the shingles, some heavier 50 yr shingles come 4 bundles do to there added weight.
Typically there are three (3) bundles per square (100 sq ft)
Answer: About 44. Average bundle covers 1/3 of a square. 1 square = 100 square feet. More info, See link below.
If the roof is 288 sq. ft. Then it will take 3 square of shingles, as each square covers 100 square feet. You will need the extra for waste. Usually a square of shingles is three bundles. However, that may vary by manufacturer.
Could be three or four, depending on the weight.
typically a square is three bundles (about 26 shingles per) but in some types of architectural shingles there are four bundles per square to make them easier to handle.
You buy shingles by the square. Three bundles cover one square. A square is 10x10. So four bundles should be more than enough.
three bundles of shingles are called a square. they will cover a 10x10 area. so lets say 100 sf. divided by 1300 sf. is thirteen. then you multiply 13 x 3 which is 39. so you will need 39 bundles of shingles. make sure you get them from somewhere they can be returned for money in case you have too many. mugetsu31
you will have to give measurements for your roof if you want the answer
There are 27 shingles per bundle with the in/ft system, three bundles per roofing square, or 100 sq. ft. You have to consider exposure, not actual size. Exposure is 5 inches so you have 5 x 36 inches =180 sq. Inches divided into 14,400 sq. inches (120 x 120) = 80 shingles divided by three = 26.66 shingles per bundle. The mfgr rounds it up to 27. I carried, opened, and nailed enough bundles to know.