Lineal metres = Square metres/Width of the boards.
The answer will depend on the width of the decking boards.
The abbreviation is m. The word lineal or linear is redundant.
Lineal metres = Square metres/Width of the boards.
A square metre is a unit of area. A linear metre is a unit of distance. The two units are therefore incompatible.
This question cannot be answered sensibly. A square metre is a measure of area, with dimensions [L2]. A [lineal] metre is a measure of distance, with dimensions [L]. The two measure different things and basic dimensional analysis teaches that you cannot convert between measures with different dimensions such as these without additional information.
The answer will depend on the width of the decking boards.
You need to know the width (in metres) of the decking. Then Linear (or lineal) Metres * Width = Square metres so Linear Metres = Square Metrage / Width
The area of a rectangular deck is found by multiplying it's width and length. In this case, a 5.4 by 4 meter deck would require 21.6 square meters of material to cover. ------ The above is true but you asked about how many linear meters of decking you would need to cover this area. To answer this you would need to give us width dimension of the decking planks that you were thinking of using.
156 meters squared = 24,336 meters.
147.63
16 meters
Actually, linear meters and meters are the same. So, you have 145,770 linear meters of timber.
Multiply feet by 0.3048
None.
The abbreviation is m. The word lineal or linear is redundant.
A lineal metre or linear metre is the same as ametre. So the answer is 16.9 metres.
Lineal metres = Square metres/Width of the boards.