roncachamp
Final Approach
Same diff.
Au contraire. For example, there are 3.785 liters to a US gallon and 4.546 liters to an imperial gallon. That's a difference of 0.761 liters.
Same diff.
Meh, its the same thing.
i dont really know for sure what kind of mileage my cars get. i just put gas in them when they get empty.
Not exactly.Meh, its the same thing.
Not exactly.
128 ounces = 1 Gallon (US)
160 ounces = 1 Gallon (Imperial)
You get an extra quart (US) with every gallon (Imperial)
What the rest of the world needs to do is realize that the imperial measurement system is so much better and convenient and drop that retarded metric system.
Then we can be on an international standard. And there can be no more fights over the proper pronunciation of kilometer (or spelling for that meter).
The metric system IS better. It's us old Canucks and all "Murricans" that grew up with the feet/inches/gallons things (either Imperial or US) that suffer from Primacy issues. Primacy says that things first learned are the strongest, and when we Canucks were forced into the metric system (and there are more than one metric system, too) we had to learn a lot of new terms, and 35 years later us old guys still mentally correct the metric numbers to Imperial so we can understand them, and we use tape measures with inches and feet.
In the metric system, everything is based on tens. No 12 inches to a foot or three feet to a yard or 5280 feet to a statute mile or 880 feet to a city block, and the inches are divided into 8ths and 16ths and so on, except in precision machine work. The Imperial/US systems are a real hodgepodge of units that make mental calculations difficult. A US gallon of water is 8 pounds, an Imperial is ten pounds. It really is dumb. A litre of water is a kilogram, and that litre is divided into a thousand millilitres that weigh a gram apiece. That water freezes at 0°C and boils at 100°C. Similar easy conversions are made into cubic measurements; 1000 litres is a cubic meter that weighs one metric tonne, or 1000 kilograms.
It's a lot simpler but we're too lazy to relearn such stuff, and we Canucks also have to have two complete sets of hand tools, too, for our metric vehicles.
Dan
Over on the red board, some guy wants to know why aircraft engines are so inefficient because when he uses an ice scraper between the seat and gas pedal to run his car up to 2500 rpm, the car doesn't use nearly as much gas as his airplane does flying at 2500 rpm.
I can't decide which smilie thng to use: or or or or even
Let me get this straight.What the rest of the world needs to do is realize that the imperial measurement system is so much better and convenient and drop that retarded metric system.
Then we can be on an international standard. And there can be no more fights over the proper pronunciation of kilometer (or spelling for that meter).
It's a lot simpler but we're too lazy to relearn such stuff, and we Canucks also have to have two complete sets of hand tools, too, for our metric vehicles.
Dan
Not just you Canucks. My 1981 Buick had a mixture of metric and SAE fasteners. I've have US and metric sockets for years.
Of course I do - because that's what you're really interested in measuring most of the time. I can think of two scenarios:You have two different starting points. Doing that, I can make numbers say anything I want.
Problem is that those 10 mpg trucks are used to do work and that work is pretty damn important to our society. If they aren't used to do work? So what? We're not about telling people they can't have something because they don't need it. Could you improve the mileage on them? Probably.Of course I do - because that's what you're really interested in measuring most of the time. I can think of two scenarios:
- You're weighing the cost of gas for a few cars. In that case, you do have different starting points. You want to know the cost of gas for the various cars.
- You're interested in reducing CO2 emissions. You're trying to make a policy decision re. emission taxes and such. In that case, it makes much more sense to get rid of the 10 mpg trucks on the road first than to try to improve gas mileage from 35 to 40 mpg. Sadly, we're mostly working on the latter....
-Felix
Of course I do - because that's what you're really interested in measuring most of the time. I can think of two scenarios:
- You're weighing the cost of gas for a few cars. In that case, you do have different starting points. You want to know the cost of gas for the various cars.
- You're interested in reducing CO2 emissions. You're trying to make a policy decision re. emission taxes and such. In that case, it makes much more sense to get rid of the 10 mpg trucks on the road first than to try to improve gas mileage from 35 to 40 mpg. Sadly, we're mostly working on the latter....
-Felix
You can use my gas mileage if you want.i dont really know for sure what kind of mileage my cars get. i just put gas in them when they get empty.
Problem is that those 10 mpg trucks are used to do work and that work is pretty damn important to our society. If they aren't used to do work? So what? We're not about telling people they can't have something because they don't need it. Could you improve the mileage on them? Probably.
In the end - you're fighting a losing battle. You can make the mileage better but the problem really comes down to the fuel.
Problem is that those 10 mpg trucks are used to do work and that work is pretty damn important to our society. If they aren't used to do work? So what? We're not about telling people they can't have something because they don't need it. Could you improve the mileage on them? Probably.
In the end - you're fighting a losing battle. You can make the mileage better but the problem really comes down to the fuel.
A train engineer friend of mine confirms that numbers like that are very realistic. Of course some routes are less efficient than others but all in all rail is really damn efficient.I recently saw an ad for a rail company claiming to transport one ton of load about 450 miles on one gallon of fuel. To match that with a personal vehicle that can only carry two people (total 350 lbs), the vehicle would have to to get about 79 MPG.
A train engineer friend of mine confirms that numbers like that are very realistic. Of course some routes are less efficient than others but all in all rail is really damn efficient.
For rough planning purposes:
300 BTU/ton/mile: rail and large shipping
3000 BTU/ton/mile: OTR truck
9000 BTU/ton/mile: LTL/local truck
21,000 BTU/ton/mile: jet air freight
I don't have any numbers for prop air freight.
Cheers,
-Andrew
But our society is in a big hurry. Railroads and big ships tend to move a lot slower than big trucks and airplanes, and their size means that they take much longer to load and unload. So we pay the truckers and FedEx airplanes to get it here right now. In many cases, the cost of keeping stuff in inventory (interest on the money tied up) forces an outfit to run on the Just-In-Time (JIT) supply system, where the stuff is scheduled to arrive within hours of its being either sold or incorporated into the production line. The automakers have been running this way for years now. They have to use aircraft to meet the tight deadlines. So we burn vast quantities of fuel just because we won't or can't wait.
Dan