On Friday 10 September 2004 08:18 am, Tim Wescott did deign to grace us with
the following:
John Woodgate wrote:
I read in sci.electronics.design that Tim Wescott
wrote (in .
com) about 'Another hopeless text: spot the errors...', on Fri, 10 Sep
2004:
In some states (Oregon included, IIRC), pi _is_ legally equal to three -
- at least for the purposes of calculating the number of board feet in a
log, and most likely as an informed decision to make calculation easier.
It is, AIUI, based on an average diameter and allows for the taper of
the log.
Probably -- I suppose if you measure more toward the butt end of the log
that'll take care of the 0.14159etc.
I used to know a guy who had worked at a company that made estimator
pads for log scalers -- had keys to enter all the parameters, an LCD
screen, microprocessor, the whole nine yards. The first time he went to
check it with a _real_ log scaler this old coot stepped out of the
shack, looked at an entire load of lumber on a truck and said "that's
about X board-feet". Kevin spent half an hour measuring and entering
and came up with the same number.
Wow, Roman Numerals! How old was this guy?
;-)
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