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Whatz the Convertion formula of "thou" to "mm"?|
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Hi guys,
I don't know how to convert "thou" to "mm"!! I need it for thermal growth calculation!! Why people need so many different units,ryt? Please help me!! Thanks Have a nice day!! |
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I'm going to try to attach a conversion program that someone gave me years ago. It has a "custom" heading for special stuff.
Danny Convert.exe (568 Kb, 67 downloads) |
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1 inch = 25.4mm
1 thou = 0.001" = 0.0254 mm Unless I'm mistaken, Ron's conversion is off by a decimal place. |
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1" = 25.4 mm So, .001" = .0254 mm
Multiply thou or mils=.001" by .0254 to get mm Alternatively, 0.03937"=1mm 39 mils to the mm I should have refreshed to see E'Pete's. Also, it is common to use the 1/100's mm dials - 2.54 of those are in a mil if you think English units. Regards, Bill Bill.Foiles@bp.com |
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.001" = .00254cm = .0254mm yep, I divided by 10 instead of multiply. Thanks.
ensing-dot-ron-at-irvingtissue-dot-ca |
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As "the" Charlie Jackson once said years ago "We are changing to metric, just doing it inch by inch."
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Charlie also knew that if God had meant for us to be metric there would have been 10 disciples.
Regards, Bill Bill.Foiles@bp.com |
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Bill, you're not being politically correct!
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And then there are US gallons, which are different to UK (imperial) gallons, US ounces which are different to UK onces, and the list goes on. Give me metric anyday (everything divides by ten)
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Driving alongside a railroad track the other day, I was telling my daughter how the width or gauge of the track is actually determined by the width of horses' butts thousands of years ago.....
Regards, Rusty |
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The British are comming, the British are comming. What was it? One if by land two if by sea. I always thought learning the metric system was easy but for the life of me I cannot think in metrics. Well, maybe I can, I do know how big a liter is, it is a little bigger than a fifth.
Ronnie |
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Hi guys,
Thanks for all your response!! I'm a new generation guy and i'm used to SI units only. Ha ha ha... If someone say i have to measure 1 feet, i will first convert it to "cm" in mind. I agree with Ron!!! Lot of man-hours are wasting here for these conversions!! Anyway thanks again!! Have a nice day!! |
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SI? So, the balance weights are in kg-m; must be big machines or tiny weights in these units. How many Pascals is that at sea level? It's got to be greater than 15.
What really kills me is to see pressure gauges in kg/cm^2. What type of unit is this? Recently, I've seen some kgf - force. If units like these are used, go to the US customary units. One of the best balance units is g-in, my personal favorite. I guess if you had to you could multiply this by two and a half and call it g-cm, but this is not SI. Regards, Bill Bill.Foiles@bp.com |
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Then there is the Poncelet (French measure of horsepower)or the Pferdestärke (German, literally "horse strength" often referred to as DIN horsepower.
John |
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Do you use the 'metric' paper size?
ISO 216 defines the A series of paper sizes based on these simple principles: The height divided by the width of all formats is the square root of two (1.4142). Format A0 has an area of one square meter. Format A1 is A0 cut into two equal pieces. In other words, the height of A1 is the width of A0 and the width of A1 is half the height of A0. All smaller A series formats are defined in the same way. If you cut format An parallel to its shorter side into two equal pieces of paper, these will have format A(n+1). The standardized height and width of the paper formats is a rounded number of millimeters. A4 is 210 X 297. Isn't that lovely? 8 1/2 X 11 looks nicer, too. The Japanese JIS P 0138-61 standard defines the same A series as ISO 216, but a slightly different B series of paper sizes, sometimes called the JIS B or JB series. JIS B0 has an area of 1.5 m², such that the area of JIS B pages is the arithmetic mean of the area of the A series pages with the same and the next higher number, and not as in the ISO B series the geometric mean. For example, JB3 is 364 × 515, JB4 is 257 × 364, and JB5 is 182 × 257 mm. Using the JIS B series should be avoided. It introduces additional magnification factors and is not an international standard. This all makes perfect sense to me! Regards, Bill Bill.Foiles@bp.com |
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A fortnight ago I weighted 12 stones; OK, 15.
Cordially, Sam Pickens pdmsampickens@gmail.com |
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One more thing; we use automatic lubers from a Canadian company. Thier stuff is in cc's which is a volumetric measure but we're shoving out grease through them. Now this makes us calculate the real quantity of grease needed and convert that to grams w/SGr a part of the process.
Cordially, Sam Pickens pdmsampickens@gmail.com |
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HI, like Jennish I'm an SI (generation X0)
What I can't understand my american friends is why your gallon has to be different than the english gallon. And another thing - please drive on the Left side of the road from now on like the rest of us! |
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Posts About vibration/alignment/balance
Whatz the Convertion formula of "thou" to "mm"?
