Want this question answered?
Thick is an adjective not a noun
That depends on the length and width of your construction.
It will depend greatly on the thickness & install method, however a standard unit of measure would be .020 for 1/4" thick tiles which is almost the same value as Concrete at .100 for 1" thickness
1"
The average thickness of an American house floor is about one inch. This would include the subfloor and any time of other floor covering.
yes it is, if that is the bottom floor
This depends on the age and whether it has a basement or not
it used thick metal and glass to observe deap sea wild life and measure the ocean floor
it should be four inches on a sub-base of sand and/or gracel plus reinforcement bars or heavy screen if it was well made.
13 x 6.7 x 0.1 = 8.71m3
Thick is an adjective not a noun
It depends on how thick you want the concrete.
Older vaults were made of steel-reinforced concrete. The walls were also very thick, which made the vault very heavy. Nowadays vaults are made of lighter and thinner concrete with additives which give the concrete extreme strenght.
Get a nice big sledge hammer, (probably a 12lb) and go at it as hard as you can. Use a smaller hammer and chisel for the corners.
If it has a timber floor under and vinyl is solid to the floor and not to thick screw down 10 mm ply at 150mm centres. seal ply with pva sealer prior too tilling. If it is a concrete floor it is best to lift vinyl.
You will need 17.8 cubic yards of concrete.
thick steel and concrete