Slope and Grade Angles
理解する Incline Measurements
Learn About SlopesSlopes appear everywhere—roads, roofs, ramps, driveways, and drainage systems. 理解する how to measure and express inclines using angles, percentages, and ratios is essential in construction, civil engineering, and accessibility design.
理解する Slope Terminology
Rise and Run
- Rise: Vertical change (height)
- Run: Horizontal change (distance)
- Slope: Rise ÷ Run (often as decimal)
Conversion Formulas
- Angle from slope: θ = arctan(rise/run)
- Slope from angle: slope = tan(θ)
- Percent grade: (rise/run) × 100
- Angle from percent: θ = arctan(percent/100)
Common Slope Values
| Angle | Percent Grade | Ratio (Rise:Run) | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5° | 0.87% | 1:115 | Minimum drainage |
| 1° | 1.75% | 1:57 | Typical floor drainage |
| 2° | 3.5% | 1:29 | Standard road grade |
| 4.8° | 8.33% | 1:12 | ADA ramp maximum |
| 6° | 10.5% | 1:9.5 | Steep road |
| 15° | 26.8% | 1:3.7 | Steep driveway |
| 26.6° | 50% | 1:2 | 6:12 roof pitch |
| 45° | 100% | 1:1 | 12:12 roof pitch |
Roof Pitch
Roof pitch is expressed as rise per 12 units of run (in US construction).
Common Roof Pitches
| Pitch | Angle | Percent | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1:12 | 4.8° | 8.3% | Nearly flat, membrane roofs |
| 3:12 | 14° | 25% | Low slope, minimum for shingles |
| 4:12 | 18.4° | 33% | Standard low slope |
| 6:12 | 26.6° | 50% | Common residential |
| 8:12 | 33.7° | 67% | Steeper residential |
| 12:12 | 45° | 100% | Steep A-frame style |
Calculating Rafter Length
Rafter length = Run × √(1 + (pitch/12)²)
Or: Rafter length = Run / cos(angle)
Road Grades
Road grades are expressed as percentages.
Typical Maximum Grades
- Interstate highways: 3-6% (varies by terrain)
- Urban streets: 6-8%
- Residential streets: 8-12%
- Driveways: 15-20% (code limits vary)
- Mountain roads: Up to 15%
- Ski slopes (expert): 50-100%+ (27-45°+)
Signs
Steep grade warning signs (like "6% GRADE") indicate percent grade. A 6% grade rises 6 feet per 100 feet of horizontal distance.
Accessibility Requirements
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) specifies ramp requirements:
ADA Ramp Standards
- Maximum slope: 1:12 (8.33%, 4.8°)
- Maximum rise per run: 30 inches (then landing required)
- Minimum width: 36 inches
- Landings: 60" × 60" minimum at top, bottom, and turns
Other Accessibility Grades
- Preferred: 1:16 to 1:20 (5-6.25%)
- Cross slope: Maximum 1:48 (2%)
- Accessible routes: Maximum 1:20 (5%)
Drainage Slopes
Proper drainage requires minimum slopes:
Common Requirements
- Paved surfaces: Minimum 1-2% (0.6-1.1°)
- Lawn grading: Minimum 2% away from building
- Gutters: Minimum 0.5% (1/16" per foot)
- Sewer pipes: 1-2% for 4" pipe, varies by diameter
- Shower floors: Minimum 2% toward drain
Measuring Slopes in the Field
変換先ols
- Level and ruler: Measure rise over known run
- Inclinometer: Direct angle reading
- Smartphone apps: Use accelerometer to measure angle
- Smart level: Digital display of angle and percent
- Clinometer: Professional angle measurement
Calculating from Measurements
If you measure a 6-inch rise over 10-foot run:
- Percent: (6/120) × 100 = 5%
- Angle: arctan(6/120) = 2.9°
まとめ
Slopes can be expressed as angles (degrees), percent grades (rise/run × 100), or ratios (like roof pitch). Each format serves different industries—angles for general measurement, percents for roads, ratios for roofing. Key references include ADA's 1:12 maximum ramp slope, typical road grades of 3-8%, and the fact that 100% grade equals 45 degrees, not vertical. 理解する conversions between these formats is essential for construction, civil engineering, and accessibility design.