Are you looking for an SI replacement for the unit "gal"?

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of John M. Steele
Sent: 11 May 2013 12:15
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:52758] RE: Numerical Verification of lbf and lbm with 9.80665
in Newton's Second Law

 

We agree on all the BIG stuff:

*Aviation/aerospace should get with the program and go SI (as should all of
the US that hasn't already done so)

*Even the kilogram-force can't redeem a gravity-based system and is long
deprecated.  An earth-gravity based system is particularly ill-suited to an
organization whose specific mission is to leave earth's gravity behind (at
least surface level gravity).

 

I think the only (minor) point on which we may disagree is whether inventing
a unit called the gravity (shortens to g or gee) is (a) no worse, (b) even
worse than inventing units like slugs or poundals to fix F = ma.  All three
are bad but I don't see much gradation; they all fudge and get into obscure
units that make any discussion seem as difficult as rocket science.  Since
some people use it, it deserves to tabulated as the third bad way to fix F =
ma; that is not a recommendation.  (I learned the slug in high school and
thought it was the only way.  I never heard of poundals until I got into
weights & measures discussions and thought the gee was just to help people
"appreciate" the force.)  As I said before, since I learned about the
newton, I have practiced slugicide.

 

  _____  

From: "mechtly, eugene a" <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Cc: "mechtly, eugene a" <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, May 10, 2013 9:49:55 PM
Subject: [USMA:52757] RE: Numerical Verification of lbf and lbm with 9.80665
in Newton's Second Law

 

John (Steele),

 

Thanks for pointing out that:

 

1. the exact product of lbm and 9.80665 = (exactly) lbf (by definition of
lbf) which is cited numerically on Page 53 of NIST SP 811 (2008 Edition) as
Footnote 23, and that

 

2. computers capable of double-precision calculations can do the arithmetic
directly without fracturing, and that

 

3. units *outside* SI (such as lbm and lbf) are often *defined* as exact
multiples of an SI unit with a number of significant digits used for
definition which is much larger than the number actually necessary to be
retained after appropriate rounding, for most applications, and that

 

4. YES, it is best practice to store the exact definitions in memory to as
many digits as storage fields permit, before calculations, and to do all
appropriate rounding *after* calculations are done with the excess number of
digits.

 

On all these four points at least John and I are in complete agreement!

 

I hope some readers will actually test the arithmetic of f = m a, and not
merely accept the NIST product number

(m a) without confirmation either by a double-precision calculation or by a
single precision fractured calculation.   

 

I  am curious to know haw many readers have actually or plan to work through
the multiplication?

 

Doing so will increase your appreciation of the gravity-free advantage of of
SI!

 

Eugene Mechtly

  _____  

From: John M. Steele [[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 10, 2013 5:22 PM
To: mechtly, eugene a; U.S. Metric Association
Cc: mechtly, eugene a
Subject: Re: [USMA:52755] Numerical Verification of lbf and lbm with 9.80665
in Newton's Second Law

Well,

1) I didn't realize we were having a contest

2) The exact figure already appears as footnote 23 in Appendix B of NIST
SP811

3) There are many calculator apps for PCs that use double precision floating
point and can do the multiplication directly and explicitly (as can Excel)

 

While it is more digits than would ever be needed, I do think it is useful
to have "exact" values (or at least the full precision of the math
processor) in computerized conversion routines.  It makes little sense to
store the "wrong" value when you can store the "right" value as a compiler
constant.

 

  _____  

From: "mechtly, eugene a" <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Cc: "mechtly, eugene a" <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, May 10, 2013 6:08:13 PM
Subject: [USMA:52755] Numerical Verification of lbf and lbm with 9.80665 in
Newton's Second Law

Why has no person yet volunteered a confirmation of the exact arithmetic of
lbf and lbm in f = m x 9.80665?

Do the exact numerical values simply have two many necessary digits to be
multiplied exactly by most of us?

Hint: Use (a + b) x (c + d) where the numbers (  ) with "too many digits"
are expressed as sums, and each part of each sum is initially expressed in
exponential form.

Then, this exercise becomes tractable on many inexpensive digital
calculators.

Who will be the first to confirm the exact fit of lbf and lbm (as *defined*
numerically) with Newton's Second Law?

Or, would most of you simply prefer to trash all that is non-SI? (a
perfectly respectable attitude) 

Eugene Mechtly

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