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Friday, 3 February 2012

Learn How To Read The Tape Measures

By Teresa K Knight


Tape measures come in numerous styles. For measuring rooms, or huge areas, the heavy duty style, in case that pulls open, snaps shut is usually utilized. Tape measure also comes in soft material, utilized by the dress maker, and to measure a hem and everything in between. Knowing what measurement it shows is essential in any task. Here's how to use tape measures:

Hold the front of the tape measure at the point in which you want to begin the measurement and then extend it enough where you want to stop. Read the first large number before your stop point, this will tell you how many inches. Look at the smaller lines of various sizes (recalling what the different sizes mean) up until your stop point. This will show you your fraction of an inch. If you want to find out how to read a tape measure, then here is a step wise guide on the same.

Before learning how to read tape measures, it is very important to know all the units of measurement. Measuring tapes are divided into a number of feet, and 12 inches make one foot. One inch, on tape measures, is further divided into sixteen parts, which are depicted by sixteen lines in between two whole numbers. Thus, if a measurement reads 2' 8-5/16'', it should be read as "two feet, eight and five sixteenths inches". If you are confused, here is for you to discover how to read a measuring tape in inches, in great detail.

For you to learn how to read tape measures, you could start by drawing a straight line on an ordinary paper. Mark a spot on this line that you will measure. Then, place the tape measure on the line. At this point, look for a whole number on the measuring tape that's closest to the mark you want to measure. Make sure you find the number which is before the mark, and not the one after it. For example, if the mark falls in between six and seven on the tape measure, you'll read six and definitely not seven. So if the mark is reading 6, that implies that the length of the line until that point is six inches and "a few more".

Now figuring out how to determine this "some more" in tape measures; If the mark you have made on the line falls exactly on 6, it means that the length of the line is 6 inches. However, if the mark is just a little ahead of the whole number 6, therefore, you need to measure the sub divisions of the inch as well. Therefore, you'll have to count how many lines that fall between the whole number 6 and the mark. In this case, the whole number is six and if the number of lines between this particular number and the mark to be measured is 4, the length of the line till the mark will be read as "six and four sixteenths" inches. The fraction "four sixteenths" may be further simplified as "one-fourth". As the measurement should always be presented in the most simplified forms, so, in this instance, the measurement would read "six and one-fourth" inches.




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