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That makes a hundredth of an hour 36 seconds, if a minute really is 60
seconds, and 1/10 of an hour 360 seconds. Sounds like the makings of a
HOBBS meter to me.
Bob Perkinson
Hendersonville, TN.
RV9 N658RP Reserved
If nothing changes
Nothing changes
The gub'mint timeclocks at the Postal Service already count in 100'ths
of an hour. This is actually a fairly common practice because it makes
timekeeping metric (kind of...).
Well untill they make it 100 hours a day, it isn't truly metric - but if they do there, will be some winging and wining about that.
That would make those seconds mighty fast as well.
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