lotsasteam
Active Member
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2010
- Messages
- 31
- Reaction score
- 14
I mostly use DTIs for alignment rather than measurement so the scale doesn't really matter. Two nice examples - enjoy!
The truth guy's: I am on the war path with inches,i can read 1inch,1/2,1/4,1/8,1/16 and than its guesswork! If somebody has this goody's in metric i'll trade or i have to sell these,sorry i have no clue how to use/read them! E-mail me with offer,i guess i have to post them in the 4 sale Line.
Manfred
[required text to meet forum 10 char minimum]What's this metric, and what is it used for???
Is there anyone here who knows how much they weigh using the SI units? As a physics teacher this is my standard question to anyone who feels like they know "all about the metric system," and don't want to review it. It's important to remember that kg can not be used to measure weight, which is a force.
The SI unit of force is the Newton, which is equal to kg*m/s^2 (i.e. force equals mass times acceleration) to find your weight take your mass in kg and multiply it by 9.81 m/s^2 (gravitational acceleration here on earth.)
~1030 NIs there anyone here who knows how much they weigh using the SI units?
~1030 N
:shrug: Not hard.
Anyone schooled on the metric system should be able to answer that.
Agreed, but yours is the first correct answer I've ever received.
That's pretty sad. Are you located in country using the Imperial system?
It's only slightly more difficult converting from pounds to Newtons, but it can easily cause confusion.
Enter your email address to join: