The stud distance in houses.
1.54 inches on a measuring tape is slightly more than one and a half inches. It falls between the 1.5-inch mark and the 1.6-inch mark. To visualize it, you can find the 1.5-inch mark and then count a little past it, which is slightly less than 1/16 of an inch from the 1.5-inch mark.
On a measuring tape, the 1 and 3/8-inch mark is located between the 1-inch and 2-inch marks. To find it, look for the 1-inch mark and then count three ticks or lines to the right, which represent the eighths of an inch. Each tick between whole numbers typically represents one-eighth of an inch, so the 1 and 3/8 mark will be the fourth tick after the 1-inch mark.
Because that is a common stud placing in frame buildings.
.30 inches on a tape measure is a little less than one-third of an inch. It can be found by locating the 1/4 inch mark (which is 0.25 inches) and then measuring an additional 1/20 of an inch past that mark. On most tape measures, this would be represented as a small division between the 1/4 inch and 3/8 inch marks.
3.35 inches on a tape measure is a little over 3 and one-third inches. It can be found by locating the 3-inch mark and then measuring an additional 0.35 inches past it. This additional measurement corresponds to just over one-third of an inch, as there are 0.33 inches in one-third. On a standard tape measure, you would see the 3-inch mark and a bit more toward the next 4-inch mark.
1.54 inches on a measuring tape is slightly more than one and a half inches. It falls between the 1.5-inch mark and the 1.6-inch mark. To visualize it, you can find the 1.5-inch mark and then count a little past it, which is slightly less than 1/16 of an inch from the 1.5-inch mark.
On a measuring tape, the 1 and 3/8-inch mark is located between the 1-inch and 2-inch marks. To find it, look for the 1-inch mark and then count three ticks or lines to the right, which represent the eighths of an inch. Each tick between whole numbers typically represents one-eighth of an inch, so the 1 and 3/8 mark will be the fourth tick after the 1-inch mark.
mujhe nhi pta..inch tape waalon ne chutiya kaat rakha hai.......maul lo roj lo....jai gyan devta....jai badhra kali...
Because that is a common stud placing in frame buildings.
.30 inches on a tape measure is a little less than one-third of an inch. It can be found by locating the 1/4 inch mark (which is 0.25 inches) and then measuring an additional 1/20 of an inch past that mark. On most tape measures, this would be represented as a small division between the 1/4 inch and 3/8 inch marks.
3.35 inches on a tape measure is a little over 3 and one-third inches. It can be found by locating the 3-inch mark and then measuring an additional 0.35 inches past it. This additional measurement corresponds to just over one-third of an inch, as there are 0.33 inches in one-third. On a standard tape measure, you would see the 3-inch mark and a bit more toward the next 4-inch mark.
8.9 on a measuring tape represents a measurement that is 8.9 units from the starting point, typically in inches or centimeters, depending on the tape's scale. It indicates a position slightly less than 9 units, specifically 9 units minus 0.1 units. On an imperial measuring tape, this would be just shy of the 9-inch mark, while on a metric tape, it would be 89 centimeters.
-- If you have a metric measuring tape, there's a mark at 2.0 meters.-- If you have an "English" measuring tape, measure off 6feet6-3/4inches ; you'll be almost exactly right on.
1.18 inches on a tape measure is slightly more than 1 inch but less than 1.25 inches. It falls between the 1-inch mark and the 1 and 1/4-inch mark. To visualize it, you can count the small increments on the tape measure, where 1.18 inches is just past the 1-inch mark, closer to the 1 and 1/5-inch mark.
Every number on a measuring tape has units. But "three eighths" has none.It's just a naked number. So, technically, "three eighths" is nowhere on ameasuring tape.If 'three eighths' had a unit, then here are a few of the places where itcould be, depending on what unit it has:three eighths inch . . .3/8 of the distance from the beginning of the tape to the mark for 1 inchthree eighths foot . . .midway between the mark for 4-inches and the mark for 5-inchesthree eighths yard . . .midway between the mark for 13 inches and the mark for 14 inchesthree eighths centimeter . . .3/8 of the distance from the beginning of the tape to the mark for 1 centimeter, or3/4 of the distance from the little tiny mark for 3 millimeters to the little tiny mark for 4 millimetersthree eighths meter . . .midway between the mark for 37 centimeters and the mark for 38 centimeters
On a standard tape measure, 5.1 inches would be represented by the fifth line after the 1-inch mark. Each inch is divided into 16 equal parts, so the 5.1 inch mark would fall between the 5-inch mark and the 6-inch mark. It is important to note that some tape measures may have additional markings for greater precision, such as 1/8 or 1/16 inch increments.
just by measuring it by 12 inches every time- chidimma agbugba