Jonathan_S wrote:Speaking of wrong units; there are a couple spots where RFC got himself out by two orders of magnitude on a missile's acceleration by using KPS^2 when it should have been gees.
Those are forgivable for two reasons:
First, they have no impact on the plot and you can readily see what was meant. We don't suddenly have missiles with 100x better performance than anyone else and then they don't exist any more. It's clearly a unit problem, same with that other author. That's unlike the problems that happen in other, less careful works, like the Enterprise travelling to the centre of the Galaxy in 19.6 hours, while it would take Voyager 90 years later more than 30 years to make the same journey.
Second, you can often blame the character for misspeaking. It's not David (the narrator) who got it wrong, it was the character! I was reading Apocalypse Troll yesterday and there's one point where a character is saying they'd detected a signal at 55 degrees of longitude north and 120 degrees of latitude west. That's clearly wrong (and yes, it stood out to me!): latitudes are north and south, longitudes are east and west. But other than swapping the names, the numbers do fit with the story and you can forgive the sergeant for that mistake in the heat of the moment of reporting to the colonel that they'd just seen something that wasn't supposed to be there.
The other moment that stood out was when the direction of something was given in azimuth / elevation and the elevation was more than 90° (it was more than 180° actually, I think it was 290). That makes no sense as we understand azimuth / elevation, but given that they have multidimensional scanning, I had to brush it off.