2004 JAN 11 SUN

Who is in charge of nutritional standards in the USA?  Does Europe use
nutritional kilojoules?

Sincerely,
Matthew Zotter
SC, USA

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of James Frysinger
Sent: Sunday, January 11, 2004 4:00 PM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:28241] High power workout?

My wife and I just got back from the local fitness center which we recently 
joined. Today I used a rowing machine for the first time and noted a couple 
of interesting features.

One of the display options on the LCD readout is time to row 500 m. Why 500
m, 
I wonder. Is that a standard race length for crew meets. (You know the 
kind---shells, oars, obnoxious helmsman.) I think it also displays the 
cumulative distance rowed in meters.

Another display option provides power output in watts. I was averaging 50 W 
today in my warm-up prelude to using the Nautilus machines, since I was not 
trying to set any records. My output varied from 40 W to 60 W and never went

any higher, so rumors that I'm on a par with a dim bulb are probably true.

Somewhere in all those displays was one that read out in calories per 
whatever. On a machine that is so neatly metric, why calories? Aren't we 
ready for joules?

Jim

-- 
James R. Frysinger
Lifetime Certified Advanced Metrication Specialist
Senior Member, IEEE

http://www.cofc.edu/~frysingj
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