Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #33787
From: Alain Ouellet <aouellet@icecanada.com>
Subject: RE: [FlyRotary] Re: Fuel - Weights and Measures
Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2006 12:04:34 -0400
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Just a quick one,

There is a conversion utility freeware software available on the web.

The link is: http://www.esbcalc.com/

and the name is: ESBUnitConv

quite easy to use and should answer all of your questions.

Bye for now

Alain
C-FJDG
(the Iceman cometh)


-----Original Message-----
From: Rotary motors in aircraft [mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net]On
Behalf Of Ernest Christley
Sent: September 29, 2006 8:44 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Fuel - Weights and Measures


George Lendich wrote:

> Bob,
> Interesting to say the least - why do I not feel fully satisfied ?
> However your right, it may all be in the records somewhere!
> I will research it.
> BTW I've never fully accepted Metric - still work mostly in inches. I
> can understand those who want simplicity, but for my own point of view
> everything seems to have evolved in12's - degrees, time etc.


12 is a perfect basis for measurements to be used by normal people
without access to calculators, and only a rudimentary knowledge of
math.  It is evenly divisible by 2, 3, and 4.  Half a foot, third of a
foot, and quarter of a foot...which is about as accurate as you need for
most business transactions at a medieval fair.  Regardless of its many
benefits, metric is an engineering system that takes more neurons to use.

> I found it interesting to see how some measurements evolved i.e a foot
> was someone's foot ( perhaps the King's) a yard is taken from the
> shoulder joint to the finger tips - from what I've read etc. etc. I
> have just found the variation of the gallon annoying from the Aviation
> point of view - then one starts to wonder WHY?

You are correct on both the foot and the yard.  The inch was derived
from one of the king's thumb joints.  Eventually someone cast a chunk of
metal, and said we'll use this from now on, 'cause they got tired of
having to remeasure the kingdom every time there was an assasination.  
In most instances, it was a bureaucrat hidden in the basement of a
corner of the castle, and the casting form was made from scrap material
laying around . . . which is a hyperbolic way of saying, it was a rather
arbitrary process.

> George ( down under)
>


--
         ,|"|"|,              Ernest Christley       |
----===<{{(oQo)}}>===----    Dyke Delta Builder      |
        o|  d  |o        http://ernest.isa-geek.org  |

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