I 'spose this is out of date too, then:
http://kronometric.org/phot/post/CiC/E6B.jpg
:(
Printable View
I 'spose this is out of date too, then:
http://kronometric.org/phot/post/CiC/E6B.jpg
:(
I used this one for quite sometime when I was learning, but nowadays it is easy to do it digitally.
http://i64.tinypic.com/20palx0.jpg
Bill must have one of yours here, but I asked and he only knows about it. He flies more often than I do.
I still have my double-sided Faber-Castell slide rule from school and university. Since the scales were based on logarithms we were required to use logs to build and operate a working model before we could have a purchased one in class. It taught us a lot about the mathematical principles involved. Of course that went out the window with the development of the electronic calculator...
Clothes sizes aside, what is this all aboot?
http://www.typicaldutchstuff.com/shoesize.jpg
from http://www.typicaldutchstuff.com
The shoe sizes, apart from being different in different countries, also often differ between men and women.
Why in the UK and Japan women are given shoe sizes half-a-size smaller than men with feet of the same length? Well done Australia for reversing the situation and putting the ladies half a size forward! But guess what, the US & Canada went a step further (literally) and bumped the shoe size for their ladies by 1.5 size compared to men. So, in the US, if your feet measure 26 cm (sorry, 10 and 1/4 inches), then you are only size 8.5 if you are a man but a mighty size 10 if you are a woman.
Why when a UK couple moves to Australia, he has the same shoe size as back home but she goes a size up? Oh... those long haul flights...
It is worth noting that despite having a wide range of sizes in the table above, a "foot-long" foot is off the scale. Why a foot (a unit of length) is called a "foot" when it is much longer than an average human foot? Think about it. Should have called it a "boot".
Dem...I just copied your table to my pooter because I am buying my two sons' Nike stuff to bring over to Australia. I checked the shoe sizes and thought that my eldest son who I bought a pair of shoes from here did not complain to me out of respect for the bother I put buying it for him. Nope, apparently the US size is the same size they use in Oz. He took a pix of the size from the lip of the shoes I bought for him.