SI Units and multipliers

SI Units and multipliers

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Einion Yrth

Original Poster:

19,575 posts

251 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
RobDickinson said:
6000kg
Not to pick on Rob, but it's something I've noticed that I find strange and sub-optimal; The above is 6Mg - why don't we use it?

Simpo Two

87,089 posts

272 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
Sod the French, 'six tons' works for me!

Mr E

22,128 posts

266 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
The engineer in me wants to point out that the SI unit is the Kg.

So I'm happier with 6000Kg than 6Mg.

Fun fact, the Kg is the only unit that still requires a physical reference. Work is ongoing to to find a less variable measure.

motco

16,230 posts

253 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
Sod the French, 'six tons' works for me!
'tonnes' to differentiate from Imperial tons.

Einion Yrth

Original Poster:

19,575 posts

251 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
Mr E said:
The engineer in me wants to point out that the SI unit is the Kg.

So I'm happier with 6000Kg than 6Mg.

Fun fact, the Kg is the only unit that still requires a physical reference. Work is ongoing to to find a less variable measure.
Fair point, but that in itself begs the question of why a unit, isn't.
Plus we also speak in terms of thousands of Kilometres rather than Megametres, so my point stands.

Dogwatch

6,274 posts

229 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
When do kilograms, metres etc. become tonnes, kilometres and whatever? Really annoys me when pretentious types talk about 5,000Kg. What's wrong with 5 tonnes?

hyperblue

2,817 posts

187 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
There's no real logic to whether we should use kilo/mega etc in relation to the base unit, it's just dictated by common usage. E.g. The mass of most everyday items we encounter is more relatable to refer to in kilograms than megagrams.

davepoth

29,395 posts

206 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
hyperblue said:
There's no real logic to whether we should use kilo/mega etc in relation to the base unit, it's just dictated by common usage. E.g. The mass of most everyday items we encounter is more relatable to refer to in kilograms than megagrams.
I guess we often use the units that are closest to the imperial units - Tons to tonnes, miles to kilometres, metres to yards, etc. etc.

Simpo Two

87,089 posts

272 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
motco said:
Simpo Two said:
Sod the French, 'six tons' works for me!
'tonnes' to differentiate from Imperial tons.
I translated it at the same time smile

Strange that NZ and Oz use km instead of miles; they have no need to.

bearman68

4,795 posts

139 months

Thursday 16th March 2017
quotequote all
Dogwatch said:
When do kilograms, metres etc. become tonnes, kilometres and whatever? Really annoys me when pretentious types talk about 5,000Kg. What's wrong with 5 tonnes?
Because in engineering terms to get the same level of accuracy you would need 5.000t.

Halmyre

11,566 posts

146 months

Friday 17th March 2017
quotequote all
Mr E said:
The engineer in me wants to point out that the SI unit is the Kg.

So I'm happier with 6000Kg than 6Mg.

Fun fact, the Kg is the only unit that still requires a physical reference. Work is ongoing to to find a less variable measure.
The SI unit is 'kg' (small k).

It seems odd that capital K (kappa) hasn't been pressed into service as a multiplier.

Lefty

16,686 posts

209 months

Friday 17th March 2017
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Where I work we measure linepipe diameter in inches and length in m.

It's like ordering 4.8m of 6x2" banghead

motco

16,230 posts

253 months

Friday 17th March 2017
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
motco said:
Simpo Two said:
Sod the French, 'six tons' works for me!
'tonnes' to differentiate from Imperial tons.
I translated it at the same time smile

Strange that NZ and Oz use km instead of miles; they have no need to.
I know, it's weird. They seem anxious to separate themselves from Britain by adopting a form of dollar as currency, but use metric units instead of Imperial not realising that we do it too. It's as if it is 'anything but British'. Some Australians are in thrall to American culture but as most haven't been there it is a bastardised version. I have a close relative who lives in Oz and he's appalled at the anti-British attitudes even in the professions. But I digress...

FredClogs

14,041 posts

168 months

Monday 27th March 2017
quotequote all
Kg is the SI unit of mass, not grams (grammes).

Hence when ever practical you should always stay in Kg, when measuring very small quantities this would introduce error because of the limitation of decimal places, hence why you might want to use mg and ug. But there would be no error introduced by expressing larger mass in kg. Ton (Tonne) doesn't mean anything really, you might as well just say "a lot" or a "big bag".

Edited by FredClogs on Monday 27th March 18:15

Einion Yrth

Original Poster:

19,575 posts

251 months

Monday 27th March 2017
quotequote all
A tonne, if you're British at least, is a Megagram. Not meaningless at all, meaning is defined.

FredClogs

14,041 posts

168 months

Monday 27th March 2017
quotequote all
Ton is far too ambiguous term to be useful, unless you specifically say Metric Ton, but why not say 1000kg ? You won't find ton used in any trade, technical or industrial context other than as a description for "a lot" or "a big un"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ton

"The UK Weights and Measures Act 1985 explicitly excluded from use for trade many units and terms, including the ton and the term "metric ton" for "tonne"."


V8LM

5,269 posts

216 months

Monday 27th March 2017
quotequote all
FredClogs said:
Kg is the SI unit of mass, not grams (grammes).

Hence when ever practical you should always stay in Kg, when measuring very small quantities this would introduce error because of the limitation of decimal places, hence why you might want to use mg and ug. But there would be no error introduced by expressing larger mass in kg. Ton (Tonne) doesn't mean anything really, you might as well just say "a lot" or a "big bag".

Edited by FredClogs on Monday 27th March 18:15
kg is the SI unit, not Kg.

Einion Yrth

Original Poster:

19,575 posts

251 months

Monday 27th March 2017
quotequote all
FredClogs said:
Ton is far too ambiguous term to be useful, unless you specifically say Metric Ton, but why not say 1000kg ? You won't find ton used in any trade, technical or industrial context other than as a description for "a lot" or "a big un"

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ton

"The UK Weights and Measures Act 1985 explicitly excluded from use for trade many units and terms, including the ton and the term "metric ton" for "tonne"."
Ton != Tonne, and all the quote tells me is that we shouldn't call a Tonne a "metric ton" - although the seppos do.

dickymint

25,854 posts

265 months

Sunday 16th April 2017
quotequote all
Lefty said:
Where I work we measure linepipe diameter in inches and length in m.

It's like ordering 4.8m of 6x2" banghead
It gets worse as the 6X2" you'll get is never 6X2" or it's metric equivalent nuts

Alias218

1,508 posts

169 months

Saturday 22nd April 2017
quotequote all
FredClogs said:
Kg is the SI unit of mass, not grams (grammes).

Hence when ever practical you should always stay in Kg, when measuring very small quantities this would introduce error because of the limitation of decimal places, hence why you might want to use mg and ug. But there would be no error introduced by expressing larger mass in kg. Ton (Tonne) doesn't mean anything really, you might as well just say "a lot" or a "big bag".

Edited by FredClogs on Monday 27th March 18:15
In my experience, when dealing with very large or very small quantities you always work with the appropriate SI unit. If you are given a value in mm, ug, kph etc., you always convert to a correct SI unit and raise to the appropriate power. In this instance that would be x*10^-3m, x*10^-9kg and any speed in kph can be multiplied by 0.277r to convert to m/s. This removes the need for excessive decimal places.