Many things cannot be drawn to their actual size but must show relative distances and measurements accurately.
A scale does this by representing one unit on the drawing to equal many units for the object. It may also work in reverse, one unit on the drawing is equal to a fraction of the unit for the object.
To allow this drawing to be understood correctly the scale needs to be stated.
In this example one unit on the map would be equal to 150,000 units on the ground. Nor does it matter which unit is chosen so long as the same units are used. It is usually written as a ratio thus:
1:150,000.
The first number is the unit on the map, the second the number of units on the ground.
The map scale represents the ratio of the map to the real thing. For example, a map scale might say that 1 inch equals 1 mile. That would mean that every inch on the map represents a mile for the real thing.
The map scale is 1:24000 which means lengths on the map are 1/24000th of the actual distance represented. 1 cm = 24000 cm = 240 meters (1 in = .38 mi) This is a mid-scale map suitable for a small town or city map where streets will be about 1 to 3 mm apart.
A map scale of 1:175 000 means that 1 centimetre on the map represent 175,000 centimetres on the ground.
A map's scale measures distance. It provides a ratio of the map's distance to the actual distance on the ground. For example, a scale of 1:100,000 means that 1 unit on the map represents 100,000 units on the ground.
A 1:50,000 scale map represents a much larger area than a 1:1 scale map. To determine the size in real life, you would need to know the dimensions of the map itself.
1:150,000 means 1 cm on map is represents 150,000 cm or 1.5 km and 1:124,000 means 1 cm represents 124,000 cm or 1.24 km. Likewise, 1:1,000,000 would be a larger area where 1cm of map represents 1,000,000 cm or 10 km on the ground.
A scale of 1:24 000 on a map means that things shown on the map are actually 24000 times bigger than they are on the map.
The map scale represents the ratio of the map to the real thing. For example, a map scale might say that 1 inch equals 1 mile. That would mean that every inch on the map represents a mile for the real thing.
Assuming you mean scale. There is no miximum. However a scale of 1:1 or larger would be pointless.
Depending on what the map is of scale is very important. On a road map of a region you might read 1 inch equals 1 mile, this is so that the map can fit on the paper or computer monitor, actual size is not an option. On a Map of the world the scale might be 1 inch to 1000 miles. Or if if something is drawn to scale it means, that you have one part of the map in feet and the other side in meters.
The map scale is 1:24000 which means lengths on the map are 1/24000th of the actual distance represented. 1 cm = 24000 cm = 240 meters (1 in = .38 mi) This is a mid-scale map suitable for a small town or city map where streets will be about 1 to 3 mm apart.
The scale. a map scale **************************************** A map with a scale of 1:50 000 (ratio of 1 in 50,000) means that 1 centimetre measured on the map represnts 50,000 centimetres on the ground.
Where does the series number on a map appear
The scale on a printed map is the ratio of a distance on the map to the distance on the ground. For example, 1 inch on a 1:250000 scale map would be 250000 inches on the earth.
A map scale of 1:175 000 means that 1 centimetre on the map represent 175,000 centimetres on the ground.
A map scale of 1:175 000 means that 1 centimetre on the map represent 175,000 centimetres on the ground.
A map scale of 1:175 000 means that 1 centimetre on the map represent 175,000 centimetres on the ground.