17 degrees kelvin
you are in the box, you have to call for time.
MLB Rule 6.02 is pretty clear:The batter shall take his position in the batters box promptly when it is his time at bat.(b) The batter shall not leave his position in the batters box after the pitcher comes to Set Position, or starts his windup.PENALTY: If the pitcher pitches, the umpire shall call Ball or Strike, as the case may be."The official commentary on this rule says even more: "Umpires may grant a hitters request for Time once he is in the batters box, but the umpire should eliminate hitters walking out of the batters box without reason. If umpires are not lenient, batters will understand that they are in the batters box and they must remain there until the ball is pitched."Unless an umpire agrees to call, "Time" at the request of the batter, the pitcher may pitch at will, and the umpire can call a strike if the pitcher throws the ball down the middle of the plate without a batter there. If a batter refuses a request to re-enter the box, the umpire can call a strike even without a pitch.
3' wide x 7' long is the outside of the chalk lines which count as part of the inside of the batter box. 6" from the edge of home plate (white part not black.) of the 7', 3' should be toward the backstop and 4' should be toward the outfield from the mid-angle point of home plate.
6ft x 4ft
The batter
It is usually powdered lime.
A diagram of the MLB batter's box can be found in the official MLB rule book. On-line, the rules are at http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/official_info/official_rules/foreword.jsp and you can see the batter's box with dimensions under 1.0 - Objectives Of The Game.
no its the size of the x-long twin box
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It all depends on the size of the box!!!! It all depends on the size of the box!!!!
the box ellders size is 1.2 inches