These results are the basis for the rule of thumb 10, 11, 12, 13.

Marion Moon

"Bill Potts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

John:

Simple arithmetic tells us that, if a meter is about 10% greater than a
yard, a square meter cannot also be 10% greater than a square yard. (A meter
is actually a little over 9% greater than a yard.)

10% greater means that the ratio is 1.1. 1.1 squared is 1.21. Thus, on that
basis, a square meter is about 20% greater than a square yard. A cubic meter
is about 30% greater than a cubic yard.

Beware, though, of multiplying approximations. One should generally
calculate using more or less exact values and then round the result.

The exact ratio of meter to yard is 100/(36 x 2.54), which is 1.0936 (when
rounded to four decimal places). 1.0936 squared is 1.19 (if we round to two
decimal places). 1.0936 cubed is 1.31 (again rounded). If we want to be
picky, we can say that a square meter is 19% greater than a square yard and
that a cubic meter is 31% greater than a cubic yard, but 20% greater (1.2
times as great) and 30% greater (1.3 times as great) are close enough for
quick mental estimation.

For progressives like us, though, the more important ratio is of the yard to
the meter (i.e., the reciprocal of the above values). That allows us to
estimate how many linear (or square or cubic) meters we're getting when
someone provides us with the value in linear (or square or cubic) meters.

1 meter = 0.9144 yards (exactly), meaning you multiply the length in yards
by about 0.9 to get the length in meters.

1 square meter =  0.8361 square yards (not exactly), meaning you multiply
the area in square yards by about 0.84 to get the area in square meters.

1 cubic meter = 0.7646 cubic yards (not exactly), meaning you multiply the
volume in square yards by about 0.76 to get the volume in cubic meters. (For
an easier, if less precise, calculation, multiply by 3 then divide by 4.)
Bill Potts, CMS
Roseville, CA
http://metric1.org [SI Navigator]




  -----Original Message-----
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf
Of john mercer
  Sent: Saturday, July 10, 2004 08:52
  To: U.S. Metric Association
  Subject: [USMA:30345] rule of thumb


  Hello could someone please tel me if a square meter is approx 10% larger
than a square yd? I have heard that another rule of thumb is that a meter is
approx 10 % longer than a yd.  A yd plus 10 % is 39.36 in. A meter is 10 %
longer than a yd minus .23 of an inch.  Close enough for every day use.



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