I would love one of those kei trucks for camping. Solid size and I can have a whole set up in the back. Would you happen to know if there’s an American alternative? I’ve looked into some kei trucks and there’s some cheap ones in japan but it would be a fortune to import and I’m not car savvy so I couldn’t do my own repairs.
Not quite true. My grandfather was a carpenter specialised on furniture and windows. He would say everything off 0.1 mm or more is that bad that you have to redo the piece. And he was right: A 0.1 mm gap in a joint is an ugly and very visible gash in your work.
If the error is less than 0.1 mm it is still not good work, but you can hide it with glue and sawdust. It is still rather easy to detect if you run your fingernail over it, but at least it is not that visible anymore.
He used big machines and hand tools, but no milling, CNC or other computer controlled machines. So decimals in millimetres are definitely useful outside of milling and the precision is achievable - even for me, who isnt a professional woodworker.
Wheelbase: 143.11 in (3,635 mm)
Length: 223.74 in (5,683 mm)
Width: 79.99 in (2,032 mm)
Height: 70.7 in (1,796 mm)
via Wikipedia via Manual.
For reference, a U.S.-made Honda Civic is 70.9 inches (1800.86 mm) wide.
A Nissan Clipper Kei Truck is 58 inches (1475 mm) wide.
A pickup truck smaller than a sedan. You can’t even buy them in the U.S. unless they’re specially imported.
American vehicles are too big. Just way too big.
I would love one of those kei trucks for camping. Solid size and I can have a whole set up in the back. Would you happen to know if there’s an American alternative? I’ve looked into some kei trucks and there’s some cheap ones in japan but it would be a fortune to import and I’m not car savvy so I couldn’t do my own repairs.
I don’t think there is an American alternative, but there are dealerships that import them.
Going into decimal mm really isn’t necessary for anything. No one can be that precise (except milling).
Not quite true. My grandfather was a carpenter specialised on furniture and windows. He would say everything off 0.1 mm or more is that bad that you have to redo the piece. And he was right: A 0.1 mm gap in a joint is an ugly and very visible gash in your work.
If the error is less than 0.1 mm it is still not good work, but you can hide it with glue and sawdust. It is still rather easy to detect if you run your fingernail over it, but at least it is not that visible anymore.
He used big machines and hand tools, but no milling, CNC or other computer controlled machines. So decimals in millimetres are definitely useful outside of milling and the precision is achievable - even for me, who isnt a professional woodworker.
The person before me did it, and they use commas instead of decimal points, so I assumed it was a standard car measurement in Europe.
3,635 mm is not 3.635 mm. If you want it’s 3.635 meters.
Whoops.
I had to double check after I read your comment. Another benefit of metric. Even when you’re wrong there’s a good chance you’re right.
Depends on the system and where you live. In hand writing, i would use 3,635 mm for decimals. However, on computer 3’635 mm to write 3.635 m.
Personally, I like the high comma as a thousands separator as it removes possibilities to misread the number. But not everyone will agree.
First line of the article reads: