Thanks for expositing this, Bill. I was pretty sure that 166 was a good number. 
It just seems right when you stand inside and look. 

But I DIDN'T know how to calculate it for myself when considering a hexagon. 
(Been more than 40 years since I took geometry and I don't use calculations 
like that regularly in my work or life. So, sorry Mr. Harvey. Most of your 
sometimes less than patient efforts with me have been lost to time. I may have 
passed the tests, but I didn't retain.)

Best,
ken winston caine


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Bill Wiltschko 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 1:32 PM
Subject: RE: [hexayurt] Legal Status for Hexayurt Constructions ? - 
Construction Permit Required ?


166 is based on the known dimensions and angle of the roof.  The roof consists 
of half sections of 4x8 foot panels set at a 30 degree angle from horizontal.  
So, the 8ft long roof triangles trace a distance of 8 times cos(30) along the 
ground, or 6.93 ft.  Each wall is 8 ft wide, so the area of the triangle made 
by a wall's intersection with the ground and the center point of the hexayurt 
is 8 times 6.93 divided by 2 (base times height divided by 2).  Multiple by 6 
to get the total area of the hexayurt.

 

Bill

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
ken winston caine
Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 11:02 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [hexayurt] Legal Status for Hexayurt Constructions ? - 
Construction Permit Required ?

 

How can that be?

 

Please work out the math for us in a message so we can see it.

 

If you just had an 8-footx8-foot floor area you would have 64 square feet. And 
with the hexagon made up of SIX (not five) 8-foot walls, you have substantially 
more than an 8-footx8-foot floor area.

 

Am sure I must have missed an earlier message in this thread, but the 
square-footage number leaped out at me in this message. For year's I've 
accepted Vinay's calculation that the traditional hexayurt provides 166 square 
feet of floor area. I'm pretty sure he's calculated that correctly. But I'm not 
a math whiz and need to see how you are working out these numbers, if you don't 
mind.

 

Thanks,

ken

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Ray Kornele 

To: [email protected] 

Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 11:41 AM

Subject: Re: [hexayurt] Legal Status for Hexayurt Constructions ? - 
Construction Permit Required ?

 

If you do the math you may find that is not the case.
It actually figures out to 41.56928 square feet for the one mane of 5 sheets of 
plywood. Where the 166 figure came from, but it's WAY off.


KrazyKyngeKorny (Krazy, not stupid)



On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 9:19 AM, Bill Wiltschko <[email protected]> wrote:

The typical hexayurt is 166 sq ft.

 

Bill

 

 

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