question about inches

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Holt
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question about inches

Post by Holt »

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
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scot2525
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Post by scot2525 »

2.2 cm = 1 inch.
protokev
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Post by protokev »

nope, 2.54 cm per in
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Jonathan Jones
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Post by Jonathan Jones »

Here is a link the OP may find very valuable:

http://www.manuelsweb.com/in_cm.htm

My Best,

Jonathan
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Holt
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Post by Holt »

ok thanks but what does 1 1.2'' mean?

I know that 1'' is 2.5cm but the 1.2''? and 1.8''?

thanks
Holt
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Castor Dioscuri
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Post by Castor Dioscuri »

My guess is that 1.2 means 1/2, and 1.8 means 1/8...
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Terrasolo
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Post by Terrasolo »

I assume that they mean 1 and a half inches, or 1 and 1 eight inch.

so with that i did my conversion and came up with this:

1 1.2 inches ( or 1.5 inches) = 3.81 cm

1 1.8 inches (or 1.125 inches) = 2.8575 cm

Hope I did that right, if not I'm sure someone else will chime in.
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Holt
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Post by Holt »

thanks.

can someone confirm that this is right?

that 1 1.2'' is 1.5''?

thanks
Holt
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Jonathan Jones
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Post by Jonathan Jones »

Pretty sure that is correct.
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Post by IndianaGear Hunter »

Confirmed as correct
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Indiana G
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Post by Indiana G »

Indiana Holt wrote:thanks.

can someone confirm that this is right?

that 1 1.2'' is 1.5''?

thanks
Holt
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 meds #-o
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Castor Dioscuri
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Post by Castor Dioscuri »

Indiana G wrote:
Indiana Holt wrote:thanks.

can someone confirm that this is right?

that 1 1.2'' is 1.5''?

thanks
Holt
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 meds #-o
All I gotta say is that this is the reason I never liked math! ;)
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TheMechanic
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Post by TheMechanic »

Since every little line equals 1/16" I'm assuming that the ".2" is 2 of these lines, meaning 1/8". Maybe he's reading the ruler like it's in metric, where the .2 would be 2mm. Therefore .5" would equal 8/16 (1/2). It starts getting weird when you convert fractions of an inch to decimals.
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Indiana G
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Post by Indiana G »

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} :lol: :lol: :lol:

uh oh...see....now i think i went too far......... :wink:
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Post by Rambler »

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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Indiana G
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Post by Indiana G »

Rambler 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
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-summit :lol:
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Post by Mannie Bothans »

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 :lol:
Woah, settle down guys. The truth is, four out of every three Americans have difficulty with fractions.

{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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Post by Michaelson »

Hey, proof of point.....one of our main U. S. banks is call "Fifth 3rd" Bank.

Why they don't call it "1 and 2/3rd's" bank, I'll never know. :roll:


:lol:


Regards! Michaelson
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Post by Rambler »

Indiana G wrote:
Rambler 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
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-summit :lol:
Hey, at least my slide-rule is 1936 period correct!
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.
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