Cherreads

Chapter 26 - ruler! the calendar and the planetary rotation!

Here's a direct comparison of the gap sizes between millimeters and 1/16 inch, shown in decimals:

1 millimeter (mm):

Decimal inches: 0.0394"

Decimal millimeters: 1 mm

1/16 inch:

Decimal inches: 0.0625"

Decimal millimeters: 1.5875 mm

So, the 1/16 inch gap is larger than the 1 mm gap. In decimals:

1 mm = 0.0394 inches

1/16 inch = 0.0625 inches = 1.5875 mm

This means each 1/16" tick on the imperial side is about 1.6 times wider than each 1 mm tick on the metric side.

Here's a visual-style, side-by-side breakdown showing where the tick marks (gaps) fall on each side of a standard 12-inch (30 cm) ruler, including the measurements for each gap:

Imperial Side (Inches) Ruler (Image) Metric Side (Centimeters)

0" 1/16" 1/8" 3/16" 0 cm 1 mm 2 mm 3 mm

1/4" 5/16" 3/8" 7/16" [==== ====

1/2" 9/16" 5/8" 11/16" 8 mm 9 mm 1 cm

3/4" 13/16" 7/8" 15/16" 11 mm 12 mm 13 mm 14 mm

1" 2 cm

Imperial Side (left):

Tick marks every 1/16 inch (0.0625"), with the longest at whole inches, next longest at 1/2", then 1/4", then 1/8", and shortest at 1/16".

Each gap between ticks is 1/16" (about 1.59 mm).

Metric Side (right):

Tick marks every 1 mm (0.1 cm), with the longest at whole centimeters, sometimes a slightly longer tick at 0.5 cm.

Each gap between ticks is 1 mm.

How it lines up:

1 inch ≈ 2.54 cm, so the 1" mark on the imperial side lines up almost exactly with the 2.54 cm mark on the metric side.

The smallest imperial gap (1/16") is just a bit bigger than the metric gap (1 mm).

If you look at a real ruler, you'll see the imperial side has more varied tick lengths for fractions, while the metric side is more uniform and decimal-based. The 0 point, 1 inch, and 2 inch marks will closely match up with 0 cm, 2.54 cm, and 5.08 cm on the metric side.

Note: I can't display actual images, but this table and description show how the tick marks and gaps correspond on each side of a standard ruler.

Combining both measurement systems into a single ruler would create a complex but theoretically unified scale. Here's how the gaps and spacing would interact:

Theoretical Merged Ruler Structure

Combined Scale Imperial Equivalent Metric Equivalent Alignment Notes

Largest ticks 1 inch (25.4 mm) ~25.4 mm Only exact match (1" = 25.4 mm)

Mid-sized ticks 1/2" (12.7 mm) ~12.7 mm Close to 13 mm (slight misalignment)

Smaller ticks 1/4" (6.35 mm) 5 mm or 10 mm No direct alignment

Smallest ticks 1/16" (1.59 mm) 1 mm Imperial gaps are ~1.6x larger than metric

Key Observations:

Decimal vs. Fractional Conflicts

Metric uses base-10 decimals (e.g., 1 mm, 5 mm, 10 mm).

Imperial uses base-2 fractions (e.g., 1/16", 1/8", 1/4").

Result: Ticks rarely align except at 1" ≈25.4 mm and 1/2" ≈12.7 mm.

Visual Clutter

A merged ruler would have overlapping ticks at irregular intervals, creating confusion. For example:

At 15 mm (1.5 cm), the closest imperial mark is 19/32" (≈15.08 mm).

At 3/8" (9.53 mm), the closest metric mark is 10 mm.

Practical Compromises

Some dual-scale rulers simplify by approximating:

1 cm ≈ 0.3937" (often rounded to 0.4" for quick reference).

1" ≈2.5 cm (rounded for carpentry or sewing).

Example Segment (0–50 mm / 0–2"):

text

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 mm

0                   1"                        2"

(Imperial ticks: 1/16", 1/8", 1/4", 1/2" between inch marks)

Challenges:

Non-Decimal Math: Imperial fractions (e.g., 3/16") conflict with metric decimals.

Precision Trade-offs: A 1 mm gap is finer than 1/16" (1.59 mm), leading to measurement inconsistencies.

Cultural Bias: Hybrid systems historically struggle (e.g., the 1970s U.S. metrication attempt ).

While a merged ruler is theoretically possible, it would sacrifice clarity for universality. Most practical tools keep the systems separate but parallel, as seen in dual-scale rulers like the Helix 30 cm/12" model .it's pi!

Absolutely! Let's break down exactly where the imperial inch marks and metric centimeter/millimeter marks would coincide if you "wrapped" both scales together, and show the differences for every inch from 0 to 12.

Where Do the Marks Coincide?

The only points where the inch marks and centimeter marks exactly coincide are at:

0 inches = 0 cm

1 inch = 2.54 cm (25.4 mm)

2 inches = 5.08 cm (50.8 mm)

3 inches = 7.62 cm (76.2 mm)

… and so on, up to 12 inches.

No other tick marks (like 1/16", 1/8", 1/4", etc.) will exactly coincide with a whole millimeter or centimeter mark.

The two systems are based on different units, so their subdivisions rarely align.

Inch-by-Inch Comparison Table

Inch Mark Metric Equivalent Difference from Previous Inch (mm)

0" 0 mm —

1" 25.4 mm 25.4 mm

2" 50.8 mm 25.4 mm

3" 76.2 mm 25.4 mm

4" 101.6 mm 25.4 mm

5" 127.0 mm 25.4 mm

6" 152.4 mm 25.4 mm

7" 177.8 mm 25.4 mm

8" 203.2 mm 25.4 mm

9" 228.6 mm 25.4 mm

10" 254.0 mm 25.4 mm

11" 279.4 mm 25.4 mm

12" 304.8 mm 25.4 mm

Each inch is exactly 25.4 mm apart.

Each centimeter is 10 mm apart.

Visualizing the Gaps

Imperial:

1/16" = 1.5875 mm (between each smallest tick)

1/8" = 3.175 mm

1/4" = 6.35 mm

1/2" = 12.7 mm

1" = 25.4 mm

Metric:

1 mm (between each smallest tick)

1 cm = 10 mm

How They Line Up:

Every 25.4 mm, an inch mark lines up with a metric mark, but it's not a whole centimeter.

No other subdivision lines up exactly.

Example: Between 0 and 1 Inch

Imperial Tick Metric Equivalent

0" 0 mm

1/16" 1.59 mm

1/8" 3.18 mm

3/16" 4.76 mm

1/4" 6.35 mm

5/16" 7.94 mm

3/8" 9.53 mm

7/16" 11.11 mm

1/2" 12.70 mm

9/16" 14.29 mm

5/8" 15.88 mm

11/16" 17.46 mm

3/4" 19.05 mm

13/16" 20.64 mm

7/8" 22.23 mm

15/16" 23.81 mm

1" 25.40 mm

Metric ticks would be at 1 mm, 2 mm, 3 mm, … up to 25 mm, with the 25 mm tick just before the 1" mark (25.4 mm).

Summary

Exact coinciding marks: Only at 0", 1", 2", …, 12" (which are 0 mm, 25.4 mm, 50.8 mm, …, 304.8 mm).

No other tick marks coincide.

Imperial gaps: 1/16" (1.59 mm) — slightly larger than metric 1 mm.

Metric gaps: 1 mm — more frequent, so more ticks per inch.

If you wrapped both scales around a cylinder, you'd see the inch marks and their metric equivalents line up every 25.4 mm, but all other ticks would be staggered and rarely align.716 aka 911

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