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Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: AN9771
Posts: 4,904
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![]() Quote:
As for centi- or mili-radians, this is not limited to the metric system! This applies equally well to the imperial system. It is just that in the imperial system height is usually measured in feet, and length or distance in yards. So you need to include a conversion factor of 3 in it. Or start measuring height in yards as well. Considering 2000 yards is close to 1 nautical mile (good enough for government work) this is not such a bad idea. Essentially, centi-radians (or milliradians) means you are talking about a slope of 1 over 100 distance (respectively 1 over 1000 distance). So if something is 3 milliradians then it is 3 yards (or 9 feet) high at 1000 yards distance. Similarly, if it is actually 27 yards high, you are 9000 yards distant from it. The same can be done in metric as long as you maintain the same system for both height and distance. 30 meters high over 2000 yards does not result in 15 milliradians. (though you will be close to within 10% error. ballpark quality)
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My site downloads: https://ricojansen.nl/downloads Last edited by Pisces; 01-09-21 at 01:15 PM. |
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