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1 square of roofing shingles is 3 bundles of shingles equaling 63 shingles per square.
That depends on the size of the shingles. ************************************************************** Size of shingles makes no difference. Shingles are sold by the bundle and the amount of bundles per square depends on the weight of the shingles. So you could have 3 bundles, 4 bundles or 5 bundles per square but they still add up to a (100 sq ft) square. The only difference would be if you are dealing with metric shingles, which is not going to make a big difference in the area covered. A square of shingles covers 100 sq ft. So for a 672 sq ft roof you will need 7 squares. Dave
A square of shingles is 100 sq. ft. The figures you list total 1,446 sq. ft. You would need at least 15 squares of shingles. You will need extra for the starter row and the ridge cap.
It depends on whether or not it requires a tear-off, if valleys are involved, what type of shingles are desired, the pitch of the roof, and many other factors including location.
10 sq ft * 15 sq ft = 150 ft4, a hyper-volume in four-dimensional space.
ewan kho eh,,,...
1 square of roofing shingles is 3 bundles of shingles equaling 63 shingles per square.
A "ft square" is a two dimensional measure. A "square ft inch" is a three dimensional measure. According to basic dimensional analysis, conversion between the two is not valid.
That depends on the size of the shingles. ************************************************************** Size of shingles makes no difference. Shingles are sold by the bundle and the amount of bundles per square depends on the weight of the shingles. So you could have 3 bundles, 4 bundles or 5 bundles per square but they still add up to a (100 sq ft) square. The only difference would be if you are dealing with metric shingles, which is not going to make a big difference in the area covered. A square of shingles covers 100 sq ft. So for a 672 sq ft roof you will need 7 squares. Dave
There are not square feet in a foot because feet are one dimensional and square feet are two dimensional.
6 ft Algebraic Steps / Dimensional Analysis 72 in*1 ft 12 in=6 ft
100
Yards are one-dimensional, sq ft are two-dimensional, question is meaningless in its present form.
Algebraic Steps / Dimensional Analysis Formula ____ in*1 ft 12 in=? ft
general rule is 3 bundles of shingles cover an area 10 ft by 10 ft (known as a square).
30 budles
It varies by company & style of shingle. Usually 33 sq. ft. coverage on most three tab shingles.. Designer shingles usually have a 25 sq. ft. coverage. You can go to sites like IKO.com or BP.com Find out what brand of shingles your local building supply store carries & research from there.