There are 128 64ths in two of anything.
4
You have to first get the eighths and the ninths to the same fraction. Multiply 8 by 9 = 64ths. Then cross - multiply the top numbers by the opposite dividend. Ie. 7x9(ths) and 4x8(ths) and add them together = 63+32 = 95/64ths = 1 31/64ths
Are you sure it won't strain your brain?
It depends upon what kind of tape it is, how the graduations are sized, what tension the tape is held at, and (for a surveyor's tape) whether the first foot or dm is forward or backward from the zero point.
There are 128 64ths in two of anything.
A tape drive.
4
You have to first get the eighths and the ninths to the same fraction. Multiply 8 by 9 = 64ths. Then cross - multiply the top numbers by the opposite dividend. Ie. 7x9(ths) and 4x8(ths) and add them together = 63+32 = 95/64ths = 1 31/64ths
Sequential access is a method of data access used by tape drives, whereby data is written or read sequentially from the beginning to the end of the tape or until the desired data is found. Basically, in order to read data from anywhere on a tape, you must start at the beginning of the tape and read until you come to the "sought-after" data.
17/64ths of an inch for steel
lba. Tape Drives. The biggest disadvantage of using tape drives is that data is stored on tape by sequential access; to read data from anywhere on the tape, you must start at the beginning of the tape and read until you come to the sought-after data
1/64 of 300000 = 300000/64 = 4687.5
A tape library stores information about tape drives, magnetic strips of tape that read and write data such as those used in video cassettes and floppy discs. Tape libraries hold tape cartridges and read tap barcodes for identification.
Are you sure it won't strain your brain?
Fractions of an inch. A "50" is 50/64ths of an inch.
3/8