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#51
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On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 17:48:04 GMT, "BruceS" wrote:
"Gene Nygaard" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 16:05:24 GMT, "BruceS" wrote: "Phred" wrote in message ... In article , "John Gilmer" wrote: Might the "hand", being almost exactly 0.1 meters, end up one day as a handy nickname for the decimeter? Maybe. After what those dirty rats did to the nautical mile (no longer 6280') anything is possible! Must say I always thought the nautical mile was 6080 feet. But, yes, even so, that "approved" definition of 1852 m is only about 6076 feet http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/outside.html so I could now miss my favourite coral trout bombie by 40 feet! :-( AIUI, the nautical mile is one of the few "old" measures with a rational basis. It is the distance along the Earth's circumference at the equator that equals one minute of arc. No, it is not. There were some geographical miles based on the equatorial circumference; the ones I have seen used were 4 minutes of arc, or about 7.421 km. But nautical miles are not and never have been based on the equator. A minute of arc at sea level on the equator is about 1855.325 m, or 6087.023 ft. That's 1.0018 international nautical miles, or 1.0012 U.K. Admiralty miles, or 1.0011 of the old pre-1954 U.S. nautical miles. However, if you go north and south across the equator, a minute of arc (for the normal geodetic latitudes) is less than 0.9950 international nautical mile. Show me anybody's nautical mile that was equal to a minute of arc on the equator. Try these: http://dnr.cbi.tamucc.edu/Waves/Naut...on?action=diff http://people.howstuffworks.com/question79.htm http://www.tpub.com/content/engineer.../14071_198.htm http://www.subsowespac.org/wwwboard/messages/269.html You've got to learn to do a better job evaluating the credibility of your sources. Go look up the radius of the Earth at sea level at the Equator, or the circumference there. You can find it in most printed encyclopedias or almanacs, or at thousands of sites online, with slightly varying numbers based on various reference ellipsoids that have been used over the years. No, it isn't anywhere near the 40,003 km that one of your sources above stole from the other. It is about 40,075.0 km to 40,075.2 km on all the 20th or 21st century ellipsoids. For example, an equatorial radius of 6378.137 km in WGS-84, or a radius of 6378.160 km in Geodetic Reference System 1967. Then do the math yourself. How long is one minute of arc at the equator, in terms of meters or feet? Gene Nygaard "It's not the things you don't know what gets you into trouble. "It's the things you do know that just ain't so." Will Rogers If there is a need to make the relation of meter to nautical mile use fewer digits, it is the meter that should be adjusted. I'm outraged, simply outraged, that the noble nautical mile should be compromised for the benefit of the lowly meter. We don't have a perfectly round earth. That's the problem. Do you have a proposal to correct this problem? The meter, exactly like the nautical mile, and unlike feet and statute miles, *is* based on the Earth. A centigrade is to a kilometer as a nautical mile is to a minute of arc. So if they were based on the same midrange value, or if we really had a perfect sphere for the Earth, we would have 1 km = 0.54 nmi exactly. Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
#52
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"John Gilmer" writes:
There is NOTHING magin about the metric system except for the fact that units differ by powers of TEN. Apart from the minor fact that almost everyone (19 out of 20 people on this planet) uses it, you mean? And of course the fact that it is a coherent system, without a need to memorize any unit-specific conversion factors in physics formulas? And of course the fact that a surprising number of useful everyday quantities such as - earth gravity (~10 m/s^2) - water density (~1000 kg/m^3) - length of equator (~40000 km) - speed of light (~300000000 m/s) - atmospheric pressure (~100 kPa) - recommended serving temperature of American soft drinks (0 deg C) - recommended brewing temperature of English breakfast tea (100 deg C) etc. happen to to be within about 1-2% of a round number, making the metric system unbelievably convenient for quick estimates with mental arithmetic. Not to forget convenient approximations such as - length of an adult's step (~1 m) - width of an adult's hand (~0.1 m) - width of the nail of the small finger (~0.01 m) - an hour's drive by car (100 km) - an hour's walk (10 km) Can you name even a single country that adopted its customary units from the US? Why do you think did almost every country decide independently to move to the metric system during the past 200 years? Markus |
#53
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![]() There is NOTHING magin about the metric system except for the fact that units differ by powers of TEN. Apart from the minor fact that almost everyone (19 out of 20 people on this planet) uses it, you mean? Gosh! Well, sport, 49 out of 50 people (on this planet) don't qualify for Mensa. And of course the fact that it is a coherent system, without a need to memorize any unit-specific conversion factors in physics formulas? Un huh. You HAVE heard of the kilogram FORCE unit, haven't you? And of course the fact that a surprising number of useful everyday quantities such as - earth gravity (~10 m/s^2) Well, in "English" its 32 ft/s^2 and 32 is a power of 2 (isn't "binary" more "rational" than decimal?). - water density (~1000 kg/m^3) A pints a pound the world round! (64 lbs/ft^3) (IOW another power of t wo) - length of equator (~40000 km) So? in English its about 25,000 miles. - speed of light (~300000000 m/s) So? 186,000 miles/second! - atmospheric pressure (~100 kPa) 14.5 psia - recommended serving temperature of American soft drinks (0 deg C) Or 32 F (another power of two). - recommended brewing temperature of English breakfast tea (100 deg C) But coffee (which AMERICANS prefer) is best brewed at 200F. etc. happen to to be within about 1-2% of a round number, making the metric system unbelievably convenient for quick estimates with mental arithmetic. Not to forget convenient approximations such as - length of an adult's step (~1 m) Well, a mile is 1,000 paces of your standard Roman Legionair type! - width of an adult's hand (~0.1 m) Length of an adult's foot is ONE FOOT. - width of the nail of the small finger (~0.01 m) ReallY? Thumb join is 1". - an hour's drive by car (100 km) Well, for most drivers who "bend" the limit just a "little", its 64 miles (another power of 2). - an hour's walk (10 km) More like 3 MILES. Can you name even a single country that adopted its customary units from the US? Who cares? Why do you think did almost every country decide independently to move to the metric system during the past 200 years? Because they all fell for the "scientific" crap as did you. Markus |
#54
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On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 18:33:15 -0500, "John Gilmer"
wrote: There is NOTHING magin about the metric system except for the fact that units differ by powers of TEN. Apart from the minor fact that almost everyone (19 out of 20 people on this planet) uses it, you mean? Gosh! Well, sport, 49 out of 50 people (on this planet) don't qualify for Mensa. And of course the fact that it is a coherent system, without a need to memorize any unit-specific conversion factors in physics formulas? Un huh. You HAVE heard of the kilogram FORCE unit, haven't you? I've heard of it. The CGPM endorsed it, and made it well defined for the first time (at a time when pounds force had also never been well defined), way back in 1901 by adopting a "standard acceleration of gravity," a concept of metrology and not of physics, something which serves no other purpose than to define a unit of force based on a unit of mass. BTW, nobody in the U.S. and perhaps not anywhere else has ever officially adopted an official value for the purpose of defining pounds force. That kilogram force (aka kilopond) is not part of the International System of Units. The vestiges of its use should be eradicated; Japan, one place that still had significant use of this obsolete unit, made a concerted effort to get rid of most of its use a few years ago. That's another important thing about the metric system--it is the only system today that is still fully supported and updated. Anything else is like old, orphaned software. Nobody will ever bother telling us to quit using using pounds force, without telling us not to use pounds of any sort. That system is no longer updated. And of course the fact that a surprising number of useful everyday quantities such as - earth gravity (~10 m/s^2) Well, in "English" its 32 ft/s^2 and 32 is a power of 2 (isn't "binary" more "rational" than decimal?). - water density (~1000 kg/m^3) A pints a pound the world round! That never was true, even if the "world" stops at the U.S. border. Check this out: http://w0rli.home.att.net/youare.swf A cubic foot of cool water equal to 1000 oz avdp is an accident that is much closer to true. (64 lbs/ft^3) (IOW another power of t wo) - length of equator (~40000 km) So? in English its about 25,000 miles. Which miles? How many feet is that? - speed of light (~300000000 m/s) So? 186,000 miles/second! - atmospheric pressure (~100 kPa) 14.5 psia Sure. Real handy. But what is it in inches of mercury, the units the National Weather Service uses for atmospheric pressure? How do you convert between your "psia" and those inches of mercury? How can you remember which one is 14.5 and which one is some other number? - recommended serving temperature of American soft drinks (0 deg C) Or 32 F (another power of two). Well, if you think that you can multiply and divide a temperature in either degrees Fahrenheit or degrees Celsius by some number and get anything meaningful, you really are stupid. Powers of two are of no significance. - recommended brewing temperature of English breakfast tea (100 deg C) But coffee (which AMERICANS prefer) is best brewed at 200F. etc. happen to to be within about 1-2% of a round number, making the metric system unbelievably convenient for quick estimates with mental arithmetic. Not to forget convenient approximations such as - length of an adult's step (~1 m) Well, a mile is 1,000 paces of your standard Roman Legionair type! After a switch to apply to a longer pace of 5 English feet, before an additional 280 feet were gratuitously added by Elizabeth I, to make it come out to a whole number of furlongs in a different system of units. - width of an adult's hand (~0.1 m) Length of an adult's foot is ONE FOOT. - width of the nail of the small finger (~0.01 m) ReallY? Thumb join is 1". - an hour's drive by car (100 km) Well, for most drivers who "bend" the limit just a "little", its 64 miles (another power of 2). - an hour's walk (10 km) More like 3 MILES. Can you name even a single country that adopted its customary units from the US? Who cares? There is at least one, of course. Its capital is named after our 5th President. Aren't you swelling with pride that they followed our lead in their units of measure? Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
#55
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On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 14:01:16 -0500, "John Gilmer"
wrote: We don't have a perfectly round earth. That's the problem. The meter, exactly like the nautical mile, and unlike feet and statute miles, *is* based on the Earth. WAS and not "Is." Still "is" in the same sense as the nautical mile is. You are right that the meter is no longer precisely defined based on the Earth, and never really was, because nobody had an accurate estimate of that before the first standard meter bar was constructed in the 1790s. But the same is true of the nautical mile, now most often defined as 1852 m. Just making sure that you aren't one of those who want to have it both ways, claiming that the nautical mile is based on the Earth and the meter is not. Those "rational" folks who first invented the meter f*cked up. No, they got damn close, when they took on a difficult task. We can do a little bit better now, a couple of centuries later--but not much better at all just using traditional surveying methods. Measure an arc at sea level on Earth in grads, and it will still be over 100 km in some places and less than 100 km in other places. In other words, the meter as now defined still fits the earth. There is no real significance in the particular meridian quadrant through Paris. Exactly how far off were they, anyway? If you go by the length of a meridian quadrant on the Geodetic Reference System 1967 ellipsoid, they'd be off by about 2.0 km in 10000 km. That's 0.020%, pretty good. But if you go by the length of a meridian quadrant in the WGS-84 ellipsoid, they are only off by 1.7 km in 10000 km--or is it 1.97 km? Whatever, it certainly differs from the value for other ellipsoids that have been used, if you get down to the nearest meter. How long is the actual meridian quadrant through Paris, if it were measured as accurately as possible today? We don't know, because measuring it is still difficult enough that nobody had even tried to recalculate it. That 0.02% is a good ballpark estimate. Still fits the earth well enough to that 0.01 grad along the equator is about 1001.9 m, but 0.01 grad (geodetic latitude) going N-S across the equator is about 995 m. The meter was re-defined as the distance between two marks on a Pt. rod kept at a certain temperature. As technology marched on more "universal" standards of length (and time, etc.) were invented. Usually the "new" standard was close enough to the old for the accuracy required for most commercial, surveying, or navigation purposes. There is NOTHING magin about the metric system except for the fact that units differ by powers of TEN. There are several more important factors, including the fact that it is used all around the world, including in many applications in the United States. The number 10 isn't even the most important number in the modern metric system. The number 1000, with preferred prefixes those which are powers of 1000, is also pretty important. But the number which is really important is the number ONE. The SI is a "coherent" system of units, as that term is used in metrology. That means that all the derived units are some unitary combination of the base units. This just isn't much of an advantage for most human activities. The "step" size of 10 times is just TOO BIG! A step size of 10 is 100 times too small. We'd all be better off if the whole world forgot "centi" and almost nobody uses "deka-" and "deci-" and "hecto-" anyway. But a whole lot a classroom time is wasted teaching those useless prefixes. The CGPM ought to have had enough sense to consign them to the same fate as "myria-" and all the double prefixes which used to be acceptable, such as micromicrofarads and hektokilometers and micromillimeters (aka millimicrons, where even the micron name is no longer acceptable). Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
#56
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Markus Kuhn wrote:
"John Gilmer" writes: There is NOTHING magin about the metric system except for the fact that units differ by powers of TEN. Apart from the minor fact that almost everyone (19 out of 20 people on this planet) uses it, you mean? And of course the fact that it is a coherent system, without a need to memorize any unit-specific conversion factors in physics formulas? And of course the fact that a surprising number of useful everyday quantities such as - earth gravity (~10 m/s^2) - water density (~1000 kg/m^3) - length of equator (~40000 km) - speed of light (~300000000 m/s) - atmospheric pressure (~100 kPa) - recommended serving temperature of American soft drinks (0 deg C) - recommended brewing temperature of English breakfast tea (100 deg C) etc. happen to to be within about 1-2% of a round number, making the metric system unbelievably convenient for quick estimates with mental arithmetic. Not to forget convenient approximations such as - length of an adult's step (~1 m) - width of an adult's hand (~0.1 m) - width of the nail of the small finger (~0.01 m) - an hour's drive by car (100 km) - an hour's walk (10 km) Can you name even a single country that adopted its customary units from the US? Can you name a single country that reached the spectacular levels of power, productivity, and wealth as the US - which did it without the metric system? Why do you think did almost every country decide independently to move to the metric system during the past 200 years? Markus |
#57
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"Bob Harrington" writes:
Can you name even a single country that adopted its customary units from the US? Can you name a single country that reached the spectacular levels of power, productivity, and wealth as the US - which did it without the metric system? Economic success is driven by a large number of factors, of which the choice of units of measurements is clearly quite negligible compared to other factors, for example social security policies or whether your currency is overrated because of its reference role in the energy market. Putting aside the fact that Japan and Germany have not been doing particularly well economically during the past decade, both countries have clearly been most formidable industrial powers and by all means a match for the US in terms of economic growth for most of the 20th century. There are numerous examples of smaller economies (India and Ireland come to mind as shining examples), where the move to the metric system coincided with substantial and sustained economic and industrial development. If you look at a more short-term view, let me also remind you that the US is at present the only country that finds it necessary to reintroduce trade tarifs to protect its uncompetitive non-metric steel industry, a step that was recently declared illegal by the WTO. Poverty levels in the US are unmatched in the EU. The inch-based human spaceflight programme, originally conceived entirely as a media-effective national prestige stunt, is in shambles. The metric-based JPL space probes, as well as the metric US Department of Defence, on the other hand seem to be doing rather fine these days, as is the mostly metric semiconductor industry. With a bit more work, it would not be difficult to make the case that the most successful enterprises the US undertakes TODAY are already done metric. Running some an inch-pound business is today a good indicator that you are a member of the tail end of the US economy! |
#58
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![]() Can you name even a single country that adopted its customary units from the US? You raise an interesting point. The two nearest neighbors of the US use the metric system. Let us consider the Mexico/US border. On one side you have the richest society in the world. On the other side you have a metric system and third world living standards! Or, (for you racists) take the US/Canader border: By the standards of the US, Canada doesn't have a significant military establishment. Yet it manages to have a lower relative national wealth. It has MUCH more OIL and gas than the US, etc. etc. SO: just WHAT IS THE PROBLEM with Canader and Mexico? The Answer: The METRIC SYSTEM! |
#59
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In article ,
"John Gilmer" wrote: [ And managed to lose previous attributions... Tsk, tsk. ;-) There is NOTHING magin about the metric system except for the fact that units differ by powers of TEN. Apart from the minor fact that almost everyone (19 out of 20 people on this planet) uses it, you mean? Gosh! Well, sport, 49 out of 50 people (on this planet) don't qualify for Mensa. ****! I'm one in fifty! (My opinion of course. :-) [...] Not to forget convenient approximations such as - length of an adult's step (~1 m) Well, a mile is 1,000 paces of your standard Roman Legionair type! Frankly, I suspect you're both wanking here. I know there are some macho types who *assume* their pace is one metre, but most barely make it to one yard -- and as for those Romans with a pace of over 5 feet, well they were either bloody big *******s, or they were running. [The standard army pace in Oz is 30 inches, the rate is 120 paces per minute, which gives you a marching speed of 100 yards/minute or about 3.4 mph. But then (50 years ago anyway) the routine was to march 50 minutes and rest for 10, so distance covered was a bit over 2.8 miles/hour. Cheers, Phred. -- LID |
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