that's like saying: how many seconds are in a pound?
2007-11-16 15:32:31
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answer #1
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answered by Bob R. 6
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If you are using foggers, you need to determine the cubic footage of the rooms being fogged. Cubic feet cannot be converted to regular feet.
I am assuming your house has 8 foot ceilings. If you multiply the square footage of your house by 8, it will give you the volume (cubic footage) of the house. Set off enough foggers to cover that volume. It doesn't matter where you put the foggers. They will gas the entire area.
If my house is 2000 square feet, the approximate volume is 2000(8) = 16000 cubic feet. I would use three foggers. I'd probably space them equally apart and open all of the doors inside the house.
For your square footage addition:
Again assuming that the ceilings in your house are 8 feet, just divide 6000 by 8 to get 750 square feet. If your ceilings are a different height than 8, just divide 6000 by the ceiling height to get the square footage the fogger will cover.
2007-11-16 15:32:10
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answer #2
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answered by Scott K 2
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You don't with the info you provide. I assume you have some house or something like that. You will have to multiply the room floor areas time the HEIGHT of the rooms, which gives you volume. If you work in feet, your answer will be in cubic feet. Then you can sum the volumes and divide by 6000 to find the number of foggers.
2007-11-16 15:38:53
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answer #3
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answered by cattbarf 7
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Okay, if you're fogging a building, do it this way:
How tall are the ceilings? Take that many feet (8?) and divide it into 6000. That's roughly 750 square feet--which works out to a square about 27 feet on a side.
Obviously, the numbers are different if the ceiling is higher, but that's the pattern to follow.
2007-11-16 15:40:34
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answer #4
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answered by Garon Whited 3
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most rooms have a ceiling height of 8 feet, so a room that has 10' x 10' x 8' high walls has 800cu ft of space so the common divisor is for every 100 sq ft of floor space you have 800 cu-ft of volume...ta da..that wasn't very hard was it,,,,
now you do it like this find the square footage of your zone by dividing your 6000 number by 800cu ft./100sq ft..that gives ya the number of 100sq are ft zones ..lets do it...6000/800=7.5 hundred or 7,500 sq ft now if your foggers are good for say 1200 square ft then you need to get 6 of them..since there pretty cheap buy seven and really give those babies a drink of black poly pop....From the E...
2007-11-16 15:44:44
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answer #5
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answered by Edesigner 6
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room dimensions of 30 ft wide x 25 long x 8 ft high = 6000 cubic feet
If your cielings are 8 feet, the 6000/8 = 750 square feet
2007-11-16 15:39:00
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answer #6
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answered by skipper 7
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most walls are 8 ft high (H). so measure (if you really need to) the width of the room(w) and the length of it(L). it doesn't matter which wall you designate W or L, as long as they're different ones and not opposite sides. ( I'm really trying to keep this simple)
so now multiply H(8)xWxL=cubic ft. of the room. The directions on the fogger can will ask for cubic ft.
2007-11-16 15:40:10
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answer #7
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answered by justagorilla 6
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What do you mean by regular feet? You cannot convert a cube into a series of 1 dimensional lines.
2007-11-16 15:29:42
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answer #8
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answered by Trekky0623 5
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Cubic feet is to measure volume and regular feet is to measure length. It is like you are asking what is your height in kg.
2007-11-16 15:35:41
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answer #9
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answered by Sam V 1
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6000 foot^3 TO foot = 557.41824 meter^2
(volume) (length) (area)
2007-11-16 15:34:44
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answer #10
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answered by metroid87706 2
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units are not the same so you cannot convert
cubic feet is volume and feet is length
2007-11-16 15:29:41
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answer #11
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answered by someone else 7
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