The point that I was making is that if the US industry does not accept compatibility with OIML standards, it might well find itself having to run two production lines - one for the export market and one for the local market. In contrast, European manufacturers need only run one production line, allowing small details like the face plate to be customer-specifi9c.
From: mechtly, eugene a [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: 14 February 2014 16:08 To: [email protected]; U.S. Metric Association Cc: mechtly, eugene a Subject: RE: [USMA:53556] RE: Hawaii State HB 1938 Martin (Vlietstra) and Eward B. The OIML Standard which Martin sent, specifies *only* the units "gramme", "Kilogramme", or "tonne" for mass, "Celsius", etc., i.e. only units from the SI, with Oxford-English spellings, and accepts *no* units from outside the SI!!! On the other hand, SI-10, the ASTM standard, allows "duality", i.e. permits units from outside the SI, sadly. Unless, the latest edition of SI-10, which I have declined to purchase, deletes units from outside the SI? In the sense of being exclusively SI, they are *not* compatible. Eugene Mechtly _____ From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of Martin Vlietstra [[email protected]] Sent: Friday, February 14, 2014 5:45 AM To: U.S. Metric Association Subject: [USMA:53556] RE: Hawaii State HB 1938 Are the ASTM standards and the OIML standards compatible? The OIML standards can be found at http://www.oiml.org/en/files/pdf_r/r105-e93.pdf. The OIML is the International Organisation for Legal Metrology. It works closely in conjunction with the CGPM and both are located in Paris. The OIML's mandate is to publish recommended standards to ensure that a measurement which is legal in one country is also legal in another. For example, if a British manufacturer, a French manufacturer and an American manufacturer were all tendering to supply petrol [gasoline] pumps to a customer in another country, the customer could, in his specification, require that tehr pumps meet OIML specification R105 (See above) and this would cover all the testing requirements. From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Edward Schlesinger Sent: 14 February 2014 05:39 To: U.S. Metric Association Subject: [USMA:53555] Hawaii State HB 1938 HB 1938 Relating to measurement standards is now being considered for petroleum products, in which "The current standards as published by the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) and the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE)" are to be adopted. Meanwhile HB 36 RELATING TO THE METRIC SYSTEM seems to be stalled in december although carried over to regular session 2014. -- Sincerely, Edward B.
