In statistics, the z-scale results from a transformation by which a Gaussian (Normal) distribution with any mean and variance is converted to a standard form: the z-score. This is tabulated so that inferences may be drawn from observed data.
1:220
No. There are many scales of model trains which include from the smallest "Z-scale" (1:220), "N-scale" (1:160), "TT-scale" (1:120), "HO-scale" (1:87.1), "OO-scale" (1:76.2), "S-scale" (1:64), "S-scale" (1:64), "O-scale" (1:48), "1-scale" (1:32) and the largest, "G-scale" (1:22.5).
on a scale of 1 to 10, it's over 9000.
Hazel Z. Sprandel has written: 'The psychoeducational use and interpretation of the Wechsler adult intelligence scale-revised' -- subject(s): Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, Wechsler Scales
I would rate my proficiency at a solid B.
LGB trains are responsible for introducing "G" scale to model railroading. The scale ratio used by LGB is 1:22.5, although other G-scale (and Gauge 1) manufacturers produce products that range from 1:20 to 1:32,[4] and for the most part, all use the same track and are compatible with one another.
go to this website- you should find the answer there.Greenleafs Dollhouse Universe- Universal Scale Converterhttp://www.greenleafdollhouses.com/news/articles/?a=42&z=2&page=2
in algebra, a 'value' is what a certain letter stands for. for instance... if z = 6 and the below is a balanced scale... .............................................. z x z Find the value of x = 12 because 2 sixes, (2 zs) equals 12!!!
The Coeffecient of corelation is definitely independent of origina and scale. If r(x,y)= cof or cor b/w X and Y let W=aX+b and Z=cY+d then r(x,y)=r( W,Z) Note that adding or subtracting a constant in all values of a random variable changes its scale. While multiplication or division change scale. The Form W=aX+b, caters the change both in origin and scale.
7 pounds
It is supposed to be read as "OUT Z" which means that the scale's zero point has out of normal range. This means that the load cell is either damaged from overloading, or calibration has been lost for some reason. You can sometimes fix this error by calibrating the scale, but many times it means the scale has been catastrophically overloaded.
No, from whom would they get help.