Hi Tom and List,
 
I like the direction your going with the wooden orientation cubes, however I 
have a question. You had said...... 
 
"First off, I want you all to know I am not taking this 
seriously, just having fun with it." 
 
Now when you say your just just having fun with this and not taking this 
seriously, is this in reference to the sizes of the new orientation cubes? Why 
I ask is because when I was looking at some of the images that you had posted 
on eBay with the new inch orientation cubes, I wasn't able to tell which one 
was the inch cube and which on was the cm cube.I think this could cause 
problems with documenting the size by using the inch orientation cubes instead 
of cm cubes for reference of size. I feel there is a reason why in science and 
meteorite science the metric system is used as a standard practices for 
measuring/documentation, if there wasn't standard size in measuring, science 
would be a mess.
 
Now I think if you made the inch orientation cube ornate looking and pushed the 
humor by altering it so it doesn't resemble the cm wooden orientation cubes, I 
could see people not getting confused with the inch orientation cube and they 
would see the humor in it.
 
Shawn Alan
 
 
[meteorite-list] Ad Announcing the "Count" cube Scale / Orientation cube
Starsinthedirt at aol.com Starsinthedirt at aol.com 
Sun Mar 14 19:48:40 EDT 2010 

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Hi List, First off, I want you all to know I am not taking this 
seriously, just having fun with it. 

About a month ago I came up with the "Martin" cube. A wood centimeter 
scale / orientation cube that would look good next to historic meteorites. 
Hence the nick name "Martin Cube". 

Well as it happened, I had just sent Count some Martin cubes when he made 
his fantastic record setting 14.7 Kg Nevada chondrite find. I got to 
thinking the little centimeter cube would look rather insignificant next to the 
monster. So I made some 1 inch cubes. 

(I wanted to stay metric but I also wanted to keep to even numbers or the 
whole scale easy size reference thing goes out the window. One inch is 
about 25mm.) 

I listed some on eBay in sets of three cubes; 1 Martin Cube, 1 new style 
cube with "CM" to designate centimeter and 1 Count Cube (The big one!). 

The link is at 

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=260569117864&ssPageName=S 
TRK:MESELX:IT 

Thanks, Tom 


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