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The Installation Method affects how the Standard Formula is applied during calculations to accommodate different ways that materials can be installed.


Installation Method

Quick Bid Item Detail dialog box with Calculation tab open


The Installation Method you choose determines whether Height, on center, or neither is used when calculating the material.


  • Horizontal method ignores the Height value in the formula when a quantity is calculated.
  • Continuous method ignores the on center (OC) value in the formula when a quantity is calculated.

Installation Method affects the Standard Formula and Quantity x Height Formula only.




























    Method

    What happens...

    Neither Horizontal or Continuous Checked

    The Standard Formula is applied as shown without modification:


    (Condition Quantity (1, 2, or 3) x Height ÷ OC x Layers + Waste (if applicable)).


    Examples include metal studs, wood studs, wall covering - any Items that require calculations based on length, height, and OC.



    Horizontal

    The formula is modified to ignore Height:


    (Condition Quantity (1, 2, or 3) ÷ OC x Layers + Waste (if applicable)).


    Examples: Acoustical Grid, cold-rolled channel, computer room floors - any Items that require calculations base on repetitive OC but where Height is irrelevant.



    Continuous

    The formula is modified to ignore the OC value:


    (Condition Quantity (1, 2, or 3) x Height x Layers + Waste (if applicable)).


    Examples: wallboard, insulation, stucco applications, painting applications, or any material requiring the quantity calculation to be in SF or SY.



    Horizontal and Continuous

    Used when neither OC nor Height is relevant to the calculation:


    (Condition Quantity (1, 2, or 3) x Layers + Waste (if applicable)).


    Examples: flooring and the labor to install a drywall ceiling - neither horizontal on centers nor Height affect the Item quantity.



    Selecting Horizontal and/or Continuous removes "height" or "on center" from the Standard Formula - it does not replace these variables with "0"; these variables are completed ignored along with the proceeding operator (multiply/divide/add, etc.).









    click here to view the previous article The Calculations tab: Condition Detail Default Entries

    The Calculations tab: On Center Exception Factors click here to view the next article


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