Very true. Around our lab, mg/mL is often pronounced as "miggs per mil". On 2006 Mar 25, at 14:04, Remek Kocz wrote: Mils are can be tricky. To a machinist they may be thousands of an inch, but to a chemist they're milliliters. -- Scott Hudnall San Francisco, CA USA ![]()
|
- [USMA:36366] Re: Units used in popular science books: ... Pierre Abbat
- [USMA:36370] Re: Units used in popular science books: ... Martin Vlietstra
- [USMA:36371] Re: Units used in popular science bo... Pierre Abbat
- [USMA:36372] Re: Units used in popular scienc... Pat Naughtin
- [USMA:36373] Re: Units used in popular sc... Mike Millet
- [USMA:36374] Re: Units used in popula... Mike Millet
- [USMA:36375] Re: Units used in popular sc... Martin Vlietstra
- [USMA:36376] Re: Units used in popular sc... Jim Elwell
- [USMA:36377] Re: Units used in popula... James J. Wentworth
- [USMA:36378] Re: Units used in p... Remek Kocz
- [USMA:36379] Re: Units used ... metricnut
- [USMA:36380] Re: Units used ... [EMAIL PROTECTED]
- [USMA:36381] Re: Units used ... Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
- [USMA:36384] Re: Units used in popula... Pierre Abbat
- [USMA:36414] Re: Units used in p... Bruce Raup
- [USMA:36415] Re: Units used in popula... Jim Elwell
- [USMA:36418] Re: Units used in p... Bill Hooper
- [USMA:36423] Re: Units used ... Jim Elwell
- [USMA:36424] Re: Units used ... Bill Hooper
- [USMA:36425] Short names (wa... Jim Elwell
- [USMA:36427] SI units long? Stan Jakuba

