What doesn't make sense about what I said? Where do you see perfect circles or perfect lines in nature? It's hard to talk about irrational things like pi or "normal", because it's not something we experience.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑11 Jun 2021, 00:11Er, yeah.godlameroso wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021, 21:29Pi is 3.14 and so forth if you measure it in decimal. That is, the ratio between an imaginary line, and an imaginary circle is 3.14....... How else can you think of that ratio in a more simplified way than 1:3.14......= ratio of a perfect imaginary line and a perfect imaginary circle. These imaginary objects don't even exist in nature, only in our minds as abstractions. So yes it makes sense that we would know about these things for thousands of years, humans have common abstractions because we have common brains and ways to perceive, although all perceptions function in unique ways.Just_a_fan wrote: ↑10 Jun 2021, 20:59
What are you talking about? Pi has been known about for thousands of years - well before the metric system.
The important part is the relationship of the line to the circle, which leads us again to more circular logic while talking about circles. Maybe there are no circles and it's really just spirals.
I'm out of here. I thought this was a serious discussion but you're just rambling about nonsense.
If we want to go back to the original topic, the world never switched to Metric. Metric is a tool to measure, just like Imperial. The measurements are abstractions, as we've pointed out, they are rooted in nonsensical arbitrary values. Both systems have their uses, one is not better than the other. PS All mil-spec fasteners are SAE.
Are they useful? Sure to a point, and beyond that point it's nonsense, as you point out. At which point do nano-meters become nonsense as a measuring tool? When you're measuring the width of the grand canyon? Where do meters become nonsense, when you're measuring the clearance of the rod bearing to the rod journal?
If you want a serious discussion I require payment up-front.