About 50 or 60
(22*6)/2 =66 qubic ft
3,800 square feet at a 4-inch depth requires 46.91 cubic yards.
It is based on the flow area, which is proportional to the square of the diameter. 2 squared = 4. 4 squared = 16. So, the 4 inch pipe can take 16/4 = 4 times the volume of the 2 inch pipe. It might be less confusing if you had picked sizes other than 2 and 4. This is a rough calculation, since pipe inside diameters are not the same as nominal sizes, but close enough for most purposes.
3 yards. 1 yard is a cubic (not square) yard and is 36 inches on all three sides. The calculation looks like this: (216x216x3)/(36x36x36)=3.0
Take the volume in inches and multiply it by the density. Example: 2" x 2" x 1/4" thick flatbar. 2*2*0.25=1 cubic inch cubic inch multiplied by density (0.2836#/cubic inch) 1*.2836 = 0.29#
It took 64 stitche
I like sewing 12 to 14 stitches per inch.The reason being, when you have to take out stitching ( and at some point you will ! ) they are not so close, that it becomes an impossibility.Also, the stitches are close enough together, that when you are strip quilting, your work is not going to come apart when you cut your pieces.The setting on most machines is 2 or 2.5.Sew on a scrap piece and count how many stitches you sewed in 1 inch.Adjust accordingly.
Take tweezers and pull the stitch up as far as possible and then cut as close to the skin as possible
stitches are points and the verb to take out is enlever
192 should do it.
4
If you have a cut that keeps bleeding, or that "gapes" open and won't stay closed, you need stitches to close it up so that it will heal. If you just have a little chunk gone and it stops bleeding, you probably don't need stitches.
Try casting on twice as many stitches. Be sure to count the number of stitches it takes to make a full pattern and see that your total number of stitches is evenly divisible by that number of stitches per pattern. In fact, I sometimes do the math before I take the time to cast on all those stitches. (Didn't they tell us in elementary school that we really would need to know arithmetic? LOL!) And, of course, you will take into account any of the stitches which create a border.
110 of them.
There are 2.54 centimetres in one inch.
Take it to a vet
Crochet or Knit? It depends on your tension and the size yarn you are using. Take the yarn you are planning on using and using the stitch suggested in the pattern, stitch out until you have about about a one inch wide row. Count the number of stitches you've made and multiply that by the length you would like the scarf to be. NOW, measure the height of your test inch. Divide the with of the scarf you would like to make by the height of your test row. This will tell you how many rows you need. Now, Multiply the number of rows needed by the number of stitches in each row. I sure hope that helps! It's kind of hard to explain unless I know for sure whether you're crocheting or knitting. THIS method is what I would use for crochet.