Vanagon EuroVan
Previous messageNext messagePrevious in topicNext in topicPrevious by same authorNext by same authorPrevious page (December 1999, week 3)Back to main VANAGON pageJoin or leave VANAGON (or change settings)ReplyPost a new messageSearchProportional fontNon-proportional font
Date:         Thu, 16 Dec 1999 08:32:05 -0800
Reply-To:     Mike Miller <mwm@LANSET.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Mike Miller <mwm@LANSET.COM>
Subject:      Re: metric vs. English
Comments: To: Austin <austins@IX.NETCOM.COM>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

Yeah, we used that measurement in surveys too...until female engineers started rotating through the survey crews. Oh, well, probably a good thing. But we still used a euphonism [SP?] for a gad [steel device for starting or making a hole in hard ground so that a piece of wood could be driven in]. Surveyors, however, have an excuse as they are the lowest form of life on the planet [or a highway construction job at least] outside of a water truck driver.

Mike '85 Westy [longing for the bad old days, mainly cause they were my young days I suspect]

> FWIW: a human hair measures ~.003" in diameter - 3 one-thousandths of an > inch. There exists a penultimate unit of measure that made it's way down > from NACA in the old days known as RCH - ostensibly the finest unit of > measure ever detected, but which I can't divulge in a public/family forum > (let yer polluted imaginations run wild, & the context is that in the old > Apollo days it was definitely a man's world, that going into space business!). > > Austin


Back to: Top of message | Previous page | Main VANAGON page

Please note - During the past 17 years of operation, several gigabytes of Vanagon mail messages have been archived. Searching the entire collection will take up to five minutes to complete. Please be patient!


Return to the archives @ gerry.vanagon.com


The vanagon mailing list archives are copyright (c) 1994-2011, and may not be reproduced without the express written permission of the list administrators. Posting messages to this mailing list grants a license to the mailing list administrators to reproduce the message in a compilation, either printed or electronic. All compilations will be not-for-profit, with any excess proceeds going to the Vanagon mailing list.

Any profits from list compilations go exclusively towards the management and operation of the Vanagon mailing list and vanagon mailing list web site.