Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Well it technically depends how much flex you have on the carpet tiles I guess...


6ft is 182.9cm, so 6 foot square is 33,452 square cm. A 50cm x 50cm tile is 2,500 square cm. Hence in strict suface area calculations you'd only need 13.38096 tiles.


In other words the cut-off cast away of one tile may well fit the exposed gap on another area of your floor.


It would be crackingly dull though, as the cut-offs became smaller and smaller with each successive iteration of the floor filling process until you cursed my name and drowned my offspring. This error would be compounded if the floor tiles had a pattern or texture that only worked in one direction.


You would, nevertheless, have made the point.


So, yes, 16 would cover the issue ;-)

To SteveT, 18 would be overkill, but allow for scissor errors.


You can lay 9 without alteration, leaving 6 more that should be cut to 50cm x 32.9cm, and the final one to be cut to 32.9cm x 32.9cm.


Having said this, the final two could be carried over to your next job and you could thus charge the customer twice for your single purchase. Very smart.


That would effectively render your purchase price over the two consecutive jobs at a (1-(34 [purchased tiles]/36 [charged tiles]))*100 = 5.5% discount to the retail price. Since average business margins are around 10%, you'd have delivered more than half of this with a single swindle.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • There was an excellent discussion on Newscast last night between the BBC Political Editor, the director of the IFS and the director of More In Common - all highly intelligent people with no party political agenda and far more across their briefs than any minister I've seen in years. The consensus was that Labour are so unpopular and untrusted by the electorate already, as are the Conservatives, that breaking the manifesto pledge on income tax wouldn't drive their approval ratings any lower, so they should, and I quote, 'Roll The Dice', hope for the best and see where we are in a couple of years time. As a strategy, i don't know whether I find that quite worrying or just an honest appraisal of what most governments actually do in practice.
    • They are a third of the way through their term Earl. It's no good blaming other people anymore. They only have three years left to fix what is now their own mess. And its not just lies in the manifesto. There were lies at the last budget too, when they said that was it, they weren't coming back for more tax and more borrowing. They'd already blamed the increase in NIC taxes on what they claimed was a thorough investigation. They either knew everything then or they lied about that too .   They need to stop lying and start behaving. If they don't the next government won't be theirs, it will be led by Nigel Farage.  They have to turn it round rapidly. Blaming other people, telling lies and breaking promises isn't going to cut it any more.
    • Is it lame? Or is it Lamey? (sorry)
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...