I don't think that's the reason Gary.
If I remember correctly from my army days, The AK-47 used ever so slightly
larger ammo than our M16. As a result, they could use our ammo in their
rifles, granted with a little less precision, but we could not use their
ammo in ours.
I don't think the decision was based on tools.
Most likely, like most everything else, there was a lobby behind that
decision.
IMO it was a BIG mistake not to go to the same system the rest of the world
uses.
73 - Rick, DJ0IP
(Nr. Frankfurt, Germany)
-----Original Message-----
From: TenTec [mailto:tentec-bounces@contesting.com] On Behalf Of Gary J
FollettDukes HiFi
Sent: Monday, April 25, 2016 10:34 PM
To: Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Come On Guys
It was once explained to me that the uS refuses to switch more for military
reasons than any other.
By having all BSA parts and fittings, the tool used by an adversary would
not properly fit, nor would any so-called standard replacement parts.
As far as Kg as a weight unit, you are correct, it is a mass unit,
equivalent to 2.2 pounds at standard elevation and conditions.
For most important measurements, the mass is more important than the weight
(as in purchasing a gram of Gold).
Torque is still in force-length units such as foot-pounds, ounce-inches,
Newton-meters and so on.
Gary
On Apr 25, 2016, at 12:09 PM, Paul Littleton<ka5biw@swcp.com> wrote:
Normally, I am a stickler for proper units. But not when someone is asking
for help. Now to address a few things.
When talking to gear-heads, the terms pounds come up in tire pressure and
in torque output of the engine. I usually bite my tongue and insert the
proper units.
As for kg weight. Have a look at cereal packages. And, there are metric
systems that use kg as a unit of weight. That is just as confusing as
Americans using pound for a unit of mass and a unit of force. The only
saving grace is that 1 kg (1 lb) mass weighs 1 kg (1 lb) force on earth, at
sea level. Still, the introduction of a constant to Newton's famous equation
is a pain.
Finally, kilocycles per second is still a valid and descriptive unit. It
isn't in the SI system, but it makes understanding frequency easier.
I would like to see the United States join much of the rest of the world
and adopt SI. We would crash fewer probes on the surface of Mars that way.
Best Regards,
Paul
tapped out on an iPad
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