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#21
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"S Green" writes:
What about the pieze = 1000 pascals? http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictP.html pieze (pz) a metric unit of pressure, part of the "metre-tonne-second" system sometimes used by European engineers. The pieze is a pressure of one sthene per square meter, or 1000 newtons per square meter, or one kilopascal. [...] The name of the unit comes from the Greek piezein, to press. The unit, spelled pièze in French, is pronounced "pee-ezz" in English. Interesting. I had never heard of a metre-tonne-second system before. Where was it invented and in which fields was it used? Markus |
#22
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"G.R. Patterson III" writes:
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. If flight levels were named in meters and were all a multiple of 300 m, this might even add an additional communications-safety mechanism: In all valid flight levels, the sum of all digits would always be divisible by three. This adds a bit of healthy redundancy to a figure that needs to be communicated without ambiguity over noisy radio channels. Getting a single digit wrong would be spotted with 60% probability. Almost as good as adding a check digit. Markus |
#23
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![]() "Markus Kuhn" wrote in message ... "S Green" writes: What about the pieze = 1000 pascals? http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/units/dictP.html pieze (pz) a metric unit of pressure, part of the "metre-tonne-second" system sometimes used by European engineers. The pieze is a pressure of one sthene per square meter, or 1000 newtons per square meter, or one kilopascal. [...] The name of the unit comes from the Greek piezein, to press. The unit, spelled pièze in French, is pronounced "pee-ezz" in English. Interesting. I had never heard of a metre-tonne-second system before. Where was it invented and in which fields was it used? Markus Well as I said our aircraft has the manifold pressure in pieze ie 27 inches = 90 pieze approx |
#24
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"Julian Scarfe" wrote:
We already have trouble enough with pilots screwing up inHg to mbar conversions. "Jukka K. Korpela" wrote in message . .. 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. The SI is equally happy with hPa or kPa. You've pulled out a standard from ISO, I think, that is designed to help you make a choice when there is no reason to do differently. I agree that, if there were no other factors influencing choice of unit, multiples of 1000 are a good default. But you've picked on a case where there *are* clearly good reasons -- the size of the unit, and the equivalence to mbar -- that make hPa a very sensible and pragmatic choice. Julian |
#25
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"Jukka K. Korpela" wrote in message
. .. "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. But I think you forget where you came into this, Jukka. The thread is entitled "units of measurement on altimeters". The quantities that need to be expressed are in the approximate range of 970 to 1040 hPa, with a precision of 1 hPa. The hPa is the right unit for that job. 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. In context, the need for a thousands separator is not great, is it? Julian |
#26
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"Julian Scarfe" wrote:
But I think you forget where you came into this, Jukka. The thread is entitled "units of measurement on altimeters". It's part of the very idea of the SI system that a single unit is used for each physical quantity, in a unified manner, not varying the system by application, country, or phase of the moon. It is clear that the system is not always optimal when judged from a narrow perspective of a specialized field, but if we go that way, we'll end up with expressing quantities in incompatible ways - there's _always_ at least some reason to deviate from a system. The pascal is a very small unit in many areas of everyday life, technology, and science. This is handled, as usual in the SI system, using a systematic set of multipliers that correspond to powers of 1000, so that the numeric values can be scaled to a reasonable range, [0.1, 1000). In some situations it might be, at least due to historical reasons, marginally more convenient to use 100 or 42 as a multiplier. But that's not a good approach. (It is true that some additional multipliers exist in the SI system. But this is due to historical reasons and discouraged in many standards, and tends to create confusion because prefixes like h or da are not widely known outside some specific areas of application, like the hectare.) The quantities that need to be expressed are in the approximate range of 970 to 1040 hPa, with a precision of 1 hPa. It's against the principles of the SI system to select units according to the range and precision that you have in some special situation. We don't invent new units every time we encounter a new situation. That was the old way. Quantities in the range 97 kPa to 104 kPa can easily be expressed to any precision you need or the current technology permits. Surely people who work with such things can be expected to be able to work with numbers with a decimal part. (If it becomes relevant to work with a precision of 50 Pa, would you insist on inventing a unit that equals 50 Pa, so that you can keep using integers only? What about 42 Pa?) The hPa is the right unit for that job. No, the hPa is not a unit in the SI system, any more than 100 Pa is. -- Yucca, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/ |
#27
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![]() It's part of the very idea of the SI system that a single unit is used for each physical quantity, in a unified manner This is fine and well while you're sitting in an armchair. But in the real world there are sometimes compelling reasons to do something different from the way a machine might handle things. In the case where 1: Not much interfacing with other units is involved 2: Rapid and accurate organic processing of the numbers is essential, sometimes in adverse conditions. 3: Communications is suboptimal 4: A narrow range of values is involved I'd say that it makes sense to use whatever units are most convenient in that case, not whatever would make some world standards body twinkle its toes. Altimeter settings are such a case. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#28
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In misc.metric-system Markus Kuhn wrote:
If flight levels were named in meters and were all a multiple of 300 m, this might even add an additional communications-safety mechanism: In all valid flight levels, the sum of all digits would always be divisible by three. This adds a bit of healthy redundancy to a figure that needs to be communicated without ambiguity over noisy radio channels. Getting a single digit wrong would be spotted with 60% probability. Almost as good as adding a check digit. Subsequently I would like to have a similarly clever idea how to define SemiCircular Flight Level Rules. Unfortunately I did not succeed to ignite a contest of ideas in www.avweb.com via the QuestionOfTheWeek (qotw). Obviously, U.S.Americans resist international needs. -- --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) |
#29
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On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 at 20:08:38 in message
, Julian Scarfe wrote: The SI is equally happy with hPa or kPa. You've pulled out a standard from ISO, I think, that is designed to help you make a choice when there is no reason to do differently. I agree that, if there were no other factors influencing choice of unit, multiples of 1000 are a good default. But you've picked on a case where there *are* clearly good reasons -- the size of the unit, and the equivalence to mbar -- that make hPa a very sensible and pragmatic choice. I know little about this but isn't there a case for making the format of digits used specific to the function as far as possible? Call 101 decimal 5; altimeter 1015; Heading 101; altitude 1 thousand 1 hundred for example? Just a thought. -- David CL Francis |
#30
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![]() David CL Francis wrote: Call 101 decimal 5; altimeter 1015; Heading 101; altitude 1 thousand 1 hundred for example? Which means you're right back to hPa, as far as the altimeter goes. 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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