question about inches
Moderators: Mike, Cajunkraut, Tennessee Smith
question about inches
hi.I just need some quick info on inches.
I am used to cm and not inches.
how much is
1 1.2'' in cm and 1 1.8'' in cm
thank you
Holt
I am used to cm and not inches.
how much is
1 1.2'' in cm and 1 1.8'' in cm
thank you
Holt
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- Indiana G
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who wrote 1.5" as 1 1.2"? that doesn't even make sense. is that derived from a specific industry or specific application or specific treatment? as an engineer, i have never seen that represented in that manner. 3/2" would make more sense to me but then again representing a measurement in that manner clouds the issue. there is too much ambiguity to represent a measurement in that manner....it can be misconstrued as 11.2 (eleven point two) inches or 1 1.2" (one and one point two) inches. now i'm confused and need to take some medsIndiana Holt wrote:thanks.
can someone confirm that this is right?
that 1 1.2'' is 1.5''?
thanks
Holt
- Castor Dioscuri
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All I gotta say is that this is the reason I never liked math!Indiana G wrote:who wrote 1.5" as 1 1.2"? that doesn't even make sense. is that derived from a specific industry or specific application or specific treatment? as an engineer, i have never seen that represented in that manner. 3/2" would make more sense to me but then again representing a measurement in that manner clouds the issue. there is too much ambiguity to represent a measurement in that manner....it can be misconstrued as 11.2 (eleven point two) inches or 1 1.2" (one and one point two) inches. now i'm confused and need to take some medsIndiana Holt wrote:thanks.
can someone confirm that this is right?
that 1 1.2'' is 1.5''?
thanks
Holt
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they are doing it WRONG....there are standards here, rules to play by and a set of facts that everyone adheres to.........1 + 1 is 2, water is wet at room temperature, alden boots aren't the right colour, the belstaff indy is a rip off, and so on and so on.....you can't just adjust things to your liking and expect everyone to understand!!!......and the there was no grey hat in raiders {jumps under the plymouth}
uh oh...see....now i think i went too far.........
uh oh...see....now i think i went too far.........
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Indiana G (I am an engineer too btw) is right, that does not conform to any standard US method of writing inches in either decimal or fractional form. I hope this is not for something critical (like a Mars lander) or it could produce a costly error.
The substitution of a period for a slash (which would mean it was "one and one half inches" ) is all that makes any sense whatsoever.
Holt, please tell us, so that we might better figure this out, what does this refer to?
Regards,
Rambler
The substitution of a period for a slash (which would mean it was "one and one half inches" ) is all that makes any sense whatsoever.
Holt, please tell us, so that we might better figure this out, what does this refer to?
Regards,
Rambler
- Indiana G
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yeah holt....let us know so rambler and i can go over there and beat on the person with our slide-rules.........then we can sit and read 'dilbert' together and have a nice indygear mini-summitRambler wrote:Indiana G (I am an engineer too btw) is right, that does not conform to any standard US method of writing inches in either decimal or fractional form. I hope this is not for something critical (like a Mars lander) or it could produce a costly error.
The substitution of a period for a slash (which would mean it was "one and one half inches" ) is all that makes any sense whatsoever.
Holt, please tell us, so that we might better figure this out, what does this refer to?
Regards,
Rambler
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Woah, settle down guys. The truth is, four out of every three Americans have difficulty with fractions.Indiana G wrote:yeah holt....let us know so rambler and i can go over there and beat on the person with our slide-rules
{edit-- Sorry folks, I'm not intending to bait anyone here... I just saw that on a bumper sticker today and I thought it was incredibly appropriate for this thread.}
Mannie Bothans, (proud citizen of the good ole U.S. of A.)
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Hey, at least my slide-rule is 1936 period correct!Indiana G wrote:yeah holt....let us know so rambler and i can go over there and beat on the person with our slide-rules.........then we can sit and read 'dilbert' together and have a nice indygear mini-summitRambler wrote:Indiana G (I am an engineer too btw) is right, that does not conform to any standard US method of writing inches in either decimal or fractional form. I hope this is not for something critical (like a Mars lander) or it could produce a costly error.
The substitution of a period for a slash (which would mean it was "one and one half inches" ) is all that makes any sense whatsoever.
Holt, please tell us, so that we might better figure this out, what does this refer to?
Regards,
Rambler
only kidding a little...I have some of my fathers and grandfathers drafting tools etc. The gadgets from the Indy era are quite cool and totally unlike their modern counterparts in quality.
I need to get a flatbed scanner so that I can pull some photos from my grandfathers college yearbooks to show the clothing styles. They are in the just pre WWI time-frame, i.e. Henry sr. and young Indy.