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On Thu, 25 Sep 2003 12:02:12 -0700, Jim Kelley
wrote: Gene Nygaard wrote: Up there in the Great White North, they use those dinky little "litres" where it takes 4.54609 of them to make a gallon, rather than the man-sized liters we have, which only take 3.785411784 to make a gallon. ;-) I suspect it's not the litre which is different, but the gallon which is different. The British Imperial Gallon occupies 277.4 in^3, while the gallon you're thinking of occupies 231 in^3. Oh, good grief. Don't tell me the Canucks use different cubic inches too, and don't even distinguish them with the spelling like they do for "litres" vs. "liters"! Are you ready for your next assignment, Sherlock? I'm wondering if you'd be willing to take on another job for me. Do you suppose you could help me track down a missing wink? Apparently there was one that didn't show up on your newsreader--they look something like this-- ;-) What's your opinion of converting US speedometers from miles/hr to furlongs/fortnight? I think you'd be one of those guys who try to talk the talk, without having learned how to walk the walk. You've never actually calculated any speeds in furlongs per fortnight yourself, have you? Gene Nygaard http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/Gene_Nygaard/ |
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