Date: Fri, 29 Jun 2012 14:36:20 -0500
Reply-To: mcneely4@COX.NET
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Dave Mcneely <mcneely4@COX.NET>
Subject: Re: EPA and Vanagon Emissions changed to measurements
In-Reply-To: <4FEDF6C3.3040802@turbovans.com>
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---- Scott Daniel - Turbovans <scottdaniel@turbovans.com> wrote:
> Hi .
> I'd say 'it depends'.
> Miles are sure handy. We've gotten used to those very nicely. 60 is
> pretty fast. 100 is a very fast even number.
> 120 km/hr does not automatically mean much to most of us 'Murakins.'
>
> and psi ...man are those nicer than kilopascals or whatever they are !!!
>
> OTOH 15, 17, and 19 mm make far more sense in wrench sizes than say
> 31/64's does.
>
> So it depends.
>
> ok ....trivia quiz...
> The origin of the dimension 'one foot' comes from the length of the
> king's foot I believe.
> What is the origin, or definition of, the meter ?
> Where did they derive that dimension from ?
Well, that was a certain fraction of the distance from the north to the south poles along a particular line of longitude. I forget both the fraction and the line of longitude. The modern meter is the wavelength of a certain color of light emitted from the most common isotope of tungsten heated to a particular temperature. Nice, handy references. But, for those stuck on the English system of measurement, we just need to remember that a meter is 39.37 inches, or a tad more than a yard.
Got your rods and furlongs straight? How about cups and bushels? I like the metric system myself.
mcneely
>
>
> On 6/29/2012 8:19 AM, mcneely4@cox.net wrote:
> > Just as a comment, boy, the SE (metric system) is sure easier than our antiquated system. thanks for reminding us, Scott. mcneely
> >
> > ---- Scott Daniel - Turbovans <scottdaniel@TURBOVANS.COM> wrote:
> >> On 6/28/2012 9:07 PM, Tom Hargrave wrote:
> >>> 2.3 kg of carbon per liter burned
> >> 2.3 kg is roughly 5.06 pounds
> >> Something is missing or not stated right as it does not seem that there
> >> are 5 lbs of carbon in one liter of fuel.
> >> if gas weighs around 6 lbs per gal .
> >> that means a liter of gas weights around 1.5 lbs.
> >> pretty hard to get 5 lbs of carbon out of 1.5 lbs of gasoline I'd think.
> >>
> >> what pollutes more ..?
> >> a 7 liter engine with an idle emissions figure of 1.0 % CO,
> >> or a 1 liter engine with that same emissions spec at idle ?
> >>
> >> Europeans measure in grams of whatever pollutant, CO2 say, per distance
> >> traveled, say grams per mile. . Not as a percentage. That makes sense
> >> to me.
> > --
> > David McNeely
> >
>
>
--
David McNeely
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