How to Calculate Grade, Fall, and Length for the Trades Person. Inches per foot, percent, and ratio
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- Опубликовано: 3 сен 2020
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I go over how to calculate grade given length and fall. Also the differences between inches per foot, percent grade, and slope as a ratio. I show how to do these problems on the whiteboard and also with a level and what the second line on the level is for. Help for trade exam, especially for the plumber's exam. How to calculate grade.
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Ty Ty Ty. You have saved me a lot of aggravation. Plus you didn’t make me feel like a total idiot😊
Glad to hear it, good luck
You were born to teach! Great video. Thanks.
Thank you
i,ve watched lots of videos on this subject and this is the only one i understand, THANK YOU1
Great to hear, thank you
You are great, explaining it so anyone can understand your math. Thank you so much.
Great to hear, thank you
Thank you. I have an existing water main in conflict with new stormwater drainage. Your lesson helped determine the exact elevation that conflict occurs and help facilitate an approved redesign with minimal owner expense.
Great to hear the video was helpful
Thank You sir for the educational video. I have been a fan of Trigonometry for many years. Keep up the good work. Have A Good Day!
Thank you, have a great day
This was a great video! Just bought my first rotary laser and this helped a lot!! thanks!!
Glad to hear it
Thank you! You keep it simple.
Thank you
Learned this in heavy equipment Operator school but haven't used it in awhile a good refresher I'm mostly doing slopes 3to1 4to1 grade.
Good to hear
you are a very good teacher !
Thanks again
Awesome explanation
Thank you
you are a great teacher !
Thank you
About the clearest explanation!!
Thank you
Very helpful.
Glad to hear it
Basic math but great presentation; very helpful
Glad it was helpful
I want to learn how to calculate grade for water drainage on a slope. Water is running downhill into our basement. I am excavating in front of our house to prevent water from draining under our house by reversing the slope in front of our house. thank you for helping me with the calculations. it made sense. Does anyone know the slop needed in compacted granite/dirt etc to drain water away from..
Not sure how the water actually travels through different types of soil,
Great video
Thank you
Thank you
Thanks for watching
Good stuff, thanks. I’m installing a tankless water heater and it requires a 3 degree slope for the exhaust pipe to prevent rain from flowing back into the combustion chamber. Now I’m befuddled.
I used to know all this from geometry and trigonometry but that was in 1971-72. All I want to figure out (or be told) how much drop in inches do I need for a 16” length pipe?
Thank you
I was trying to understand this for my own math class, but I'm confused! The total length seems to be a horizontal distance (as in your diagram) but you later refer to total length as the length of the pipe! In fact the pipe will be longer than the "total length" from your diagram, because the pipe is your "hypotenuse". Is this a mistake or am I missing something? Thanks for the video though, it is very helpful!
Yes that is correct
I'm building a N scale Talmadge Bridge and coming off the Bridge it has a left hand curve then straight for about 2ft with a 2 inch fall. I'm trying to figure out what the grade should be, and what would the angle be in order for it to go from a 2 inch to a 0 degree with a curve at the top. Is that even possible? Can you help me out? Harry
You can measure the height and calculate the run and get the average slope that way
So, if you have a 6” pipe at an 1/8 “ slope what percentage is 1/8” ? There are no lengths available.
If you do 6 divided by 1/8 you get a slope about 1 in 48 which is about 2 percent
You explained that a 1% slope is the same as 1/100 but how is it expressed as a ratio? Can you explain how ratios are used to express slope, for example a "3:1 slope." Is it for every unit of fall (3) there's a unit (1) of run? That seems extremely steep. Also, how does that translate to percentage?
1 over 100 is a ratio. Rise of 1 and a run of 100
@@ColfaxMath Thank you for your reply. So is a 3:1 slope a rise or fall of 3 and a run of 1? I hear this used in instances where it would make for sense to be a 1:3 slope
3 to 1 pitch is 3inches of drop for every foot of run. 1st number represents inches
I knew all of that. What I really wanted to know was how much length you lose on account of the grade.?!?
If I understand your question correctly, you lose the difference between the hypotenuse and the bottom leg
What about if I only know the length and have to work out the fall by only knowing the degree at which it should fall at?
If you have one length and angle have to use trigonometry to find the other pieces. There is a table you can use, or similar triangles
@@ColfaxMath could you elaborate on what to google because I’ve struggled finding anything like it.
Could I convert degree to a percentage and work it out that way?
@@teewithey5879 Tee, I'll try and get around to making a video on it.
Am not aware of the numbers,do we have constants?
Just the measurements that you get off the site
What's the formula?
How many inches difference 24 feet2% the fall So what’s the cut to the toe?
2% is 2 in a hundred or 1 in 50 or 1/2 in 25 approximately. If you 2% grade you would have to drop a half inch in 25 inches.
Bro takes the longest way home every day I guarantee u tht.
Probably