cadastral wrote:pokermind wrote:IIRC it was noted in
OAR the old English system was used coming directly from Holy Langhorn
The big problem is different bases, in angles 360 degrees weight 16 oz to the pound, 12 inches to one foot yada yada, time 24 hours to a day 60 minuits to one hour etc remain. You will note the metric system did not introduce metric angles thus even the metric system is a mixed bag of bases. Yep a centiday is 14.4 old time minuites.
Poker
The metric system does have a base-10 angle measurement, the
gon, sometimes called the
grad or
gradian, which is equal to one four-hundredth of a circle. It isn't very commonly used, I believe SI uses the radian, which is more convinient mathematically
The metric system also has the militarily useful 'mil' for measuring circular motion. For those who know redleg-speak, a mil is one meter deviation at one thousand meters range. For rifled artillery, I calculated as much as 15 mils to adjust for the spin of the shell on long, high-arcing flights.
Yeah, I did fire direction control with 'sticks' (modified slide rules for ballistic tables based on charge and shell combination) and a big piece of graph papter. At one point I was faster than the computer operators - their big advantage was in 'cold stick' fires, which are before the initial ranging that helps adjust for climate, altitude, and winds.
That said, in three shots I could put a 155mm round within 10 meters of the target point if the observer was on his game.
Anyhow, mils are likely to arrive soon, especially with rifled artillery and true howitzers needing a better means to adjust than 'a touch to the right'.
Dave
Oh, almost forgot. There's 6400 mils in a circle.