How To Know My Height Without Measuring
Posted : admin On 26.08.2019How to Measure Without a Tape Measure or Ruler. There are some tips and tricks to measuring without a ruler or tape measure. If you don’t have a tape measure then the key is to find something you do have that is a known dimension. If you know the dimension of any other object then you have a simple ruler. Use these everyday objects to measure in place of a ruler or tape measure. Measure Waist Circumference. The size of your waist will also determine if you have an excessive amount of fat, known as visceral fat. A waist larger than 35 inches on a woman or 40 inches on a man means a great surplus of visceral fat. To measure your waist, use the soft tape measure and loop around your waist. Hold it firm and pressed into your skin. BA., BEd., Get yourself a setsquare that is large enough to cover most of your head -at least a half. Get a ruler or tape measure. Stand against the upright section of your doorway. Place the setsquare on your head and make sure the vertical section is flush with the upright section of the doorway.
Trees are tall. Humans, relatively speaking, are not. And we're not the most agile climbers in the animal kingdom, either. But we are crafty, and we can out-think even the most wizened redwood. But how do you do so when all you've got is a pencil, a mirror, or a smartphone? In the first installment of a new series powered by Q&A site Stack Exchange, we're taking the question to the crowd.
Photo by Two+two=4'.
Question:
I'd like to install an antenna for Internet service, but it will need to clear some trees on my neighbor's property as it requires a clear line of sight to work.
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I really don't trust my estimating skills enough to plunk down money on a utility pole that might be too short or too tall. And climbing the tree with a tape measure (in my neighbor's yard) is a bit intrusive and dangerous.
Other than eyeballing it, is there a clever way that I can get a reasonably accurate (within 5' or so) estimate of the height of the tree?
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— JohnFx (originally asked here)
Top Answer
How To Determine Your Height
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Find a stick the length of your arm. Hold your arm out straight with the stick pointing straight up (90-degree angle to your outstretched arm). Walk backwards until you see the tip of the stick line up with the top of the tree. Your feet are now at approximately the same distance from the tree as it is high (provided the tree is significantly taller than you are, and the ground is relatively level).
Old logger method. Simple.
— Answered by shirlock homes
I recently finished up a French Polish guitar with their #9 swirl remover (a very fine polish) and liked the result so much I tried it on my 41 yr old Martin 000-28 that I have had since new. I have wiped down this Martin with a wet (not even wrung out) cloth and dried it perhaps 5 times, never waxed or oiled anything, and it still looked great except for a spot on the top where my arm rests. Rank amateur comments - and have found that Maguires has a lot of various polishing compounds as well as waxes. I recently started building guitars - alert! Turtle wax carnauba car wax guitar. The #9 made the thing look better than new.My Ford with 263,000 miles and 9 years on it had never been washed (never) and when I went to sell it I polished a small section of the side and it looked new!!
Alternative Answer: The Shadow Method
1. Measure your shadow. 2. Measure yourself. 3. Measure the tree's shadow. 4. Calculate (tree's shadow * your height) / your shadow = ~Tree Height.
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You'll have to do this on a sunny day (you may need an assistant), and the ground will have to be relatively flat as a slope will throw off the measurement.
— Answered by Tester101
Alternative Answer: The Pencil Method
Take a pencil and move several meters away from the tree. Outstretch your arm and hold the pencil so that you can measure the height of the tree on the pencil with your thumb. Then turn the pencil at the base of the tree by 90 degrees. Note where the distance measured by thumb hits the earth and measure the distance from this point to the tree. This is the height of the tree.
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— Answered by bennymo
Alternative Answer: The Mirror Method
1. Fill a black pan with water, this makes a great mirror during the day (it's best you don't use your best pan for this).
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2. Place pan a known distance from the tree, call the distance from the middle of the pan to the tree B1 in the equations.
3. Stand back from the pan until you see the top of the tree in the middle of the reflection. Measure from your eye level to the ground, straight down, and call it A2. From that point on the ground to the center of the pan is B2.
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4. You now have two right angle triangles that are proportional and only one unknown, the tree height (A1). A1/B1 = A2/B2 or A1 = A2 * B1 / B2. Or in English, the tree height is your height times the distance from the pan to the tree divided by the distance from you to the pan.
For example, if your eyes are 6' above the ground, the pan is 40' from the tree, and you stand 5' back from the pan, you get 6 * 40 / 5 or a 48' tree. For more accurate measurements, get yourself on top of a step ladder or some other high point.
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Note that if you can't determine how level the ground is between you and the pan, you may be better off measuring from eye level to the pan and then do some geometry to get your height above the pan (A2 = square root(eye to pan squared / pan to foot squared)).
— Answered by BMitch
Alternative Answer: The Mobile App Method
You might try one of the existing smart phone applications like this one: Smart Measure.
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— Answered by mfloryan
For more answers to this question, go to the original post at Stack Exchange, an expert knowledge exchange on diverse topics from software programming to cooking to scientific skepticism.
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