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#11
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![]() Does anybody use feet for altitude? Everyone except the Former USSR and China, as near as I can figure. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (requires authentication) see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
#12
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In misc.metric-system Jukka K. Korpela wrote:
"Julian Scarfe" wrote: How can you possibly suggest that it would be more "practical" to use kPa? Because one digit less is needed, and conversions are easier when powers of 1,000 are used as normally. No, you need the same number of digits, and a decimal point in addition. A pressure difference of 1 hPa corresponds to an altitude difference of 8 m at sea level. That is just enough precision, but 80 m (corresponding to 1 kPa) would be intolerable. Pilots are usually required to keep an assigned altitude to within +- 15 m (50 feet). -- Klaus Wacker Experimentelle Physik V http://www.physik.uni-dortmund.de/~wacker Universitaet Dortmund Tel.: +49 231 755 3587 D-44221 Dortmund Fax: +49 231 755 4547 |
#13
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"Jukka K. Korpela" wrote in message
. .. Describing them as hPa makes it clear what the unit is for someone familiar with the SI, without risking accidents through unit confusion. Would it be clearer to use a non-recommended prefix than a recommended prefix? Besides, your argument indicates a fundamental confusion. There is only one SI unit of pressure, the pascal (Pa). That's part of the beauty and practicality of the system. All the rest that is used to express pressures relates just the way of expressing the numerical value. For convenience, we can use multiplier prefixes of _the_ unit if we like, or a multiplier of the number, consisting of a power of ten. I'm not sure where you believe the "confusion" lies. Describing the unit as hPa rather than mbar makes it clear that the unit is Pa and the prefix, which is a standard SI prefix, gives the multiplier. The preference to use powers of 1000 is just a preference because practicality and pragmatism is sometimes more important than an arbitrary recommendation. This is a perfect example of where pragmatism should (and does) win. The reason for preferring powers of 1,000, explicitly expressed in several recommendations and standards, is its practicality, based on the use of the system as a whole. If you take arbitrary special aspects, you can always find arguments in favor of using non-SI units or non-recommended SI expressions - but then you lose all the benefits of a unified system. Do you really believe that you lose *all* the benefits of a unified system by using a prefix described (without deprecation, BTW) in the SI Brochure? Using hPA is a half-hearted "solution" that combines the trouble of transition One man's half-hearted solution is another's essential compromise. :-) Julian Scarfe |
#14
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"Julian Scarfe" wrote:
How can you possibly suggest that it would be more "practical" to use kPa? "Jukka K. Korpela" wrote in message . .. Because one digit less is needed, and conversions are easier when powers of 1,000 are used as normally. I forgot to mention in my response, BTW, that the same number of digits *is* required. Aviation applications require a precision of 100 Pa in measured pressures. Your choice is between 1013 hPa or 101.3 kPa. By adding the "daycimal", you simply make it more difficult for pilots to say. Julian Scarfe |
#15
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"Gene Nygaard" wrote in message
... The preference to use powers of 1000 is just a preference because practicality and pragmatism is sometimes more important than an arbitrary recommendation. This is a perfect example of where pragmatism should (and does) win. Oh, good grief. Does anybody use feet for altitude? Do all of the analog instruments show all the digits in those feet? Pilots have become accustomed to using feet for altitude. Can you imagine the confusion that would arise if the unit suddenly shifted by a factor of 10? "Descend and maintain 300 decafeet" Any room for confusion there? We already have trouble enough with pilots screwing up inHg to mbar conversions. What does an altimeter setting of "nine ninety two" mean? As a physicist and a pilot, I'd rather live with the inconvenience of using a hecto prefix for stuff that comes across my desk than risking confusion in the cockpit. So would ICAO. Julian Scarfe |
#16
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"Julian Scarfe" wrote:
I forgot to mention in my response, BTW, that the same number of digits *is* required. It depends on the quantities. I was referring to the most common quantities that people see expressed. When tagging isobars in weather maps, the trailing zero is just a nuisance. And when more accuracy is needed, it is natural to accept that fractions might be needed. Your choice is between 1013 hPa or 101.3 kPa. You just gave one more reason to favor kPa. The numeric value 1013 is not in the recommended range, and it raises the question of a thousands separator, which is language dependent, so that some cultures would use 1 013 (and would need a no-break space to prevent undesired line breaks, and an en space to avoid too wide a gap, and cannot get both) while some would use 1'013 or 1.013 or 1,013. Situations where the quantity will be taken as a thousand times too small would be quite rare, but the damage could be serious, so why take the risk. -- Yucca, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
#17
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"Julian Scarfe" wrote:
We already have trouble enough with pilots screwing up inHg to mbar conversions. So while you take the trouble, wouldn't it be best to move to something that lasts, due to being part of a system that is meant to be applied in all areas of life when expressing physical quantities? It's better to move directly to the SI system as recommended in general, rather than first moving, say, to a partly decimal-based variant of the Anglo- Saxon system, or - to take an example about different quantities - first move from the use of different gallons to a Unified Gallon, then to hectoliters, later to what the SI system really recommends. -- Yucca, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
#18
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![]() The numeric value 1013 is not in the recommended range, and it raises the question of a thousands separator, which is language dependent, so that some cultures would use 1 013 (and would need a no-break space to prevent undesired line breaks, and an en space to avoid too wide a gap, and cannot get both) while some would use 1'013 or 1.013 or 1,013. I think this depends on the context of usage. In aviation, I think the thousands separator would be omitted most of the time, it's primarily a convenience when you have lots of digits, and four isn't "lots". As for units, it depends on what you are integrating with. In aviation, you are integrating with nothing, so you could measure in quattloos for all it matters. It is in engineering, where many conversions and calculations are taking place, that the units need to fit into a system and kPa would be preferred. I live with meters, millimeters, and centimeters just fine. And (interestingly) in aviation, I live with hundreds of feet and thousands of feet just fine too. (I flight plan in thousands, such as 4.5K for 4500 feet, but weather comes in hundreds, as in 45 for a cloud layer at the same alititude. I kinda wish it were more consistant, but only kinda. Each system has its place. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#19
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In misc.metric-system Julian Scarfe wrote:
Pilots have become accustomed to using feet for altitude. Can you imagine As a european pilot I would prefer meters. But how to rearrange separation standards, any ideas? -- --Peter Hermann(49)0711-685-3611 fax3758 --Pfaffenwaldring 27 Raum 114, D-70569 Stuttgart Uni Computeranwendungen --http://www.csv.ica.uni-stuttgart.de/homes/ph/ --Team Ada: "C'mon people let the world begin" (Paul McCartney) |
#20
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![]() Peter Hermann wrote: As a european pilot I would prefer meters. But how to rearrange separation standards, any ideas? Use 300 meters for every 1,000'. That's a little less separation, but it wouldn't be too hard for a pilot to deal with the arithmetic. George Patterson Battle, n; A method of untying with the teeth a political knot that would not yield to the tongue. |
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