Unit74
Final Approach
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2014
- Messages
- 6,992
- Display Name
Display name:
Unit74
And every auto engine is in liters.
Because quoting them in gallons is just too small a number for consumers to appreciate.
And every auto engine is in liters.
That's why I'll always be a fan of cubic inches. Much more precise, too.Because quoting them in gallons is just too small a number for consumers to appreciate.
But not as precise as cc. To be fair, that matters more for them rinky-dink Yoor-Peen engines than 'Murrican V8's:That's why I'll always be a fan of cubic inches. Much more precise, too.
As in on ten millionth of the distance between the north pole and the equator along a line passing through Paris?Nautical miles and knots at least have a basis in physical geography.
Except when you use Slugs and Pounds, or Pounds and Poundels in an attempt to get g out of Newton's laws.In the happily simple standard system, we deal with lb mass and lb force and the engineers know how to work with it.
Not goofy, totally ****ed up. Someone should be shot.so there are fun mixes of force calculations done in kg-force, which is a bit goofy.
Because quoting them in gallons is just too small a number for consumers to appreciate.
The distance between lines of latitude one minute apart. The length was variable depending on your distance from the equator, so it's been fixed at 6076 feet. I think it's actually 6083 feet at the equator., less near the poles.As in on ten millionth of the distance between the north pole and the equator along a line passing through Paris?
That's the nautical mile.The distance between lines of latitude one minute apart. The length was variable depending on your distance from the equator, so it's been fixed at 6076 feet. I think it's actually 6083 feet at the equator., less near the poles.
I've yet to figure out what problem the metric systems was supposed to solve. That grade school teachers couldn't teach to multiply and divide by 12?
Just 12? Hm. Let's see:
12 inches in a foot.
Inches are usually divided into eighths or sixteenths or 32s.
A yard is three feet, or 36 inches.
A statute mile is 5280 feet.
A city block is 660 feet.
An acre is 43,560 square feet.
Standard barometric pressure is 29.92 inches of mercury.
A US gallon of water weighs 8.33 pounds at room temperature.
An Imperial gallon of water is 10.02 pounds at its max density.
A cubic foot of water is 6.2 Imperial gallons. 7.4805 US gallons. Around 62.2 pounds.
A ton is 2000 pounds. A pound is 16 ounces.
Water freezes at 32°F. Boils at 212°F at sea level pressure.
And that's not talking much about rods or chains or fathoms or leagues...
Metric.
10 millimeters in a centimeter. 10 centimeters in a decimeter. 10 decimeters in a meter. 1000 meters in a kilometer. A liter is 1000 cubic centimeters, or milliliters. A liter of water weighs one kilogram. 1000 grams in a kilogram, so a cc (ml) of water weighs one gram. A metric tonne is 1000 kilograms. A hectare is 10,000 square meters. Water boils at 100°C, freezes at 0°C.
So a lot of it is based on water. And everything is base 10. Unfortunately, atmospheric pressure isn't nicely aligned with the weight of water, so we end up with 1013.25 hectopascals (millibars) as standard sea level pressure. I have seen one altimeter calibrated in millibars.
Aviation is a mix of metric and US and other stuff. Fuel is in US gallons. Altitude in feet, temperature in Celsius, distance in nautical miles. Weight in pounds, pressure in pounds per square inch. Barometer in inches of mercury. Lead content of avgas is typically measured in grams per gallon, a real mixup.
Back to holes in cowlings.