they do that to mark their territory
The distance between Mark and Fernando can be anything between 0 and 20 feet.
the distance between the zero mark and scale marks represent how much it weight from nothing or empty.
its not how you mark your ball, its how you mark your titleist.
The ball is placed at the position of the ball when the player is downed. If that position is not between the hash marks it will be moved to the nearest hash.
To mark the boundary or section of the property that they are cutting down trees on.
On a standard ruler, 1.5cm would be the distance between the 1cm mark and the 2cm mark. It's a relatively small distance and can be found by eyeballing or using the measurement markings on the ruler.
As long as the ball isn't in motion and it is on the green, you can mark its position and wait your turn to play.
What year did mark grace hit the ball out of the park at wrigley field
Every number on a measuring tape has units. But "three eighths" has none.It's just a naked number. So, technically, "three eighths" is nowhere on ameasuring tape.If 'three eighths' had a unit, then here are a few of the places where itcould be, depending on what unit it has:three eighths inch . . .3/8 of the distance from the beginning of the tape to the mark for 1 inchthree eighths foot . . .midway between the mark for 4-inches and the mark for 5-inchesthree eighths yard . . .midway between the mark for 13 inches and the mark for 14 inchesthree eighths centimeter . . .3/8 of the distance from the beginning of the tape to the mark for 1 centimeter, or3/4 of the distance from the little tiny mark for 3 millimeters to the little tiny mark for 4 millimetersthree eighths meter . . .midway between the mark for 37 centimeters and the mark for 38 centimeters
The easiest way to measure break speed is to record the sound of the period from the cue striking the cue ball to the cue ball striking the object ball, and calculate the speed from the duration. Mark the spot on the table for both where the center of the object ball is and center of the cue ball is and measure this distance. Perform the break. Record the sound and use a computer program that allows sound file editing, such as Audacity. Find the 2 peaks, the first being the cue to cue ball and shortly after, the cue ball to object ball. This should be measured in thousandths of a second (this is Time). The difference between the two times is the elapsed time of cue ball travel. The distance between the 2 points on the table minus 2 1/4 inches (distance from edge to center of each ball, times 2) is the distance travelled in that time period this is Distance). Use the following formula to calculate the speed the cue ball travelled this distance inthe measure time - Break Speed in MPH is = Distance / 12 x 60 / 88 / Time Multiply by 1.467 to get feet per second. Multiply that by 12 to get inches per second. It is worth noting that if you do exactly the same break with a 19 ounce cue and with a 21 ounce cue, both with the same tip, the fastest speed will be with the lighter cue because acceleration is the primary factor in producing a fast break.
Mark off and measure the distance of the throw. Time the throw with the stopwatch. This will give you the feet per second. If you want miles per hour take that and multiply by 0.68