I have never seen such a feature on a car, but then I am not an expert in
motoring matters.  Having said that, I am sure that making two decimal
places available on kilometre-only dashboards would encourage [some] people
to measure distances using their cars.

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Pat Naughtin
Sent: 25 January 2009 20:53
To: U.S. Metric Association
Cc: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:42558] Re: An Associated Press article in today's Atlanta
Journal-Constitution

 

Dear Martin,

 

The odometer had two decimal places. It was reading to an accuracy of 10
metres. To operate this feature my friend had to switch something under the
dash. He normally operated it with only one decimal place; i.e. with an
accuracy of 100 metres.

 

Cheers,

 

Pat Naughtin

Heelong, Australia

On 2009/01/26, at 3:29 AM, Martin Vlietstra wrote:





Pat

 

Two decimal places on its odometer?  I have never seen that before, though I
have seen may odometers with one decimal place.  OK, pieces of land in the
Aussie outback are big and I would happily accept that you meant two
significant figures.   :-)

 

Regards

 

Martin  

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Pat Naughtin
Sent: 24 January 2009 20:30
To: U.S. Metric Association
Cc: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:42468] Re: An Associated Press article in today's Atlanta
Journal-Constitution

 

Dear Jim,

 

A year or two ago (and I think that I reported it here at that time) a
friend asked me how he could check the size of a piece of rural land that
his daughter wanted to buy. As he had a fairly new car, I asked if it had
the facility to measure kilometres and to use two decimal places on its
odometer. It did, so we drove to one corner of this fairly rectangular
property, set the odometer to read zero, drove along one fence line, and
noted the distance. We did the same for another side of the property and
then multiplied to find the area that we reported as hectares.

 

I recall that the selling agent had described the property in his
advertising (using acres) as about 30 % larger that it was in reality.
Knowing the ture area gave my friend's daughter considerable negotiating
leverage.

 

On the issue of your school's parking lot, I have often thought (but I have
not done this yet) that a hectare marked out as a square on a school
property could be a useful educational asset. Other than seeing its size, to
run around it is 400 metres, along one side is 100 metres, its diagonals
should both be 141.421 for budding Pythagoreans to measure to the nearest
millimetre. You mat remember that I wrote about this in a one-page article
called A metric playground at
http://www.metricationmatters.com/docs/MetricPlayground.pdf 

 

Cheers,

 

Pat Naughtin

Geelong, Australia

 

On 2009/01/25, at 6:31 AM, James Frysinger wrote:







Well, I know that my farm is 100 ha in area. That's a square kilometer. I've
used this figure and have discussed hectares in my weekly columns in the
local newspaper of record (The Mountain View).* As I recall, we determined
that the high school parking lot was 0.5 ha in size. So, I would hope that
many of the residents of Van Buren County TN are at least slightly
conversant with hectares.

We live east of McMinnville TN (which is in Warren County). On the west side
of McMinnville is a community called Morrison. In Morrison is an automotive
parts supplier called Yorozu Automotive Tennessee. Their web page gives the
size of their land area and their building in square meters only. Knowing
how many square meters are in a hectare, I can easily see that their land
area is just under 25 ha, or about one-fourth of the size of my farm.
http://www.yorozu-corp.co.jp/en/point/yat.htm

Jim
* I'm taking a temporary break in the writing of this column.

-- 
James R. Frysinger
632 Stony Point Mountain Road
Doyle, TN 38559-3030

(C) 931.212.0267
(H) 931.657.3107
(F) 931.657.3108

 

 

Pat Naughtin

PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,

Geelong, Australia

Phone: 61 3 5241 2008

 

Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped
thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric
system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that they now save thousands
each year when buying, processing, or selling for their businesses. Pat
provides services and resources for many different trades, crafts, and
professions for commercial, industrial and government metrication leaders in
Asia, Europe, and in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian
Government, Google, NASA, NIST, and the metric associations of Canada, the
UK, and the USA. See http://www.metricationmatters.com
<http://www.metricationmatters.com/>  for more metrication information,
contact Pat at [email protected] or to get the free
'Metrication matters' newsletter go to:
http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter to subscribe.

 

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