Plane Sailing
Astral Admin - Mwahahaha!
Imperial for fantasy or modern; metric for future or sci-fi.
This would be my preference too
Imperial for fantasy or modern; metric for future or sci-fi.
On thing, if you use imperial you might want to use yard and quarts instead of foot and galleons. Those units are very close to meters and liter in metric and can roughly be converted on a 1:1 basis.
Speaking as a science teacher, it's a notable point that a number of physics equations don't work if they aren't conducted in metric.
Or better yet, make up your own in-setting system.
Now that's not remotely true. In my aerospace engineering education, in order to be proficient in both systems we routinely did our calculations in both SI and English standard units; engineering companies I work with now use either depending on how old our products are -- despite a metric standard, I've dealt with some products so old that all of their technical documentation is in English units.
You have to be sure to convert the dimensioned constants to the correct units, of course: e.g. Earth g = 9.81 m/sec^2 or 32 ft/sec^2. The other key is to remember that the standard pound is not a unit of mass; it's a unit of force. The actual unit of mass is a slug; the pound is a slug-ft/sec^2, just like the SI unit of force, the Newton, is a kg-m/sec^2. If you don't use slugs where you would use kilograms, then your equations won't work.
Units of measure are independent of the physical relationships, since all units can be converted into all other units. There's an entire technique of analysis called dimensional analysis that relies on this relationship to enable calculations.
I prefer the metric system as the logical one. Working with 5 or 10 feet increments is okay due to years of exposure, but please spare me furlongs, fathoms, acres and all the other weird stuff.
By the way, how do imperial-thinking scientist measure the wavelenght of light? Nano inches? Or do you have some bizarre measurement, like osc(illation)?
Have you ever heard of the CGS system? Or of Atomic Units? Science can be done in a lot of different units. There are branches of engineering that routinely use PSI and BTU...Ahem, if you are a scientist you are required to use SI units and the equations are attuned to that.
Have you ever heard of the CGS system? Or of Atomic Units? Science can be done in a lot of different units. There are branches of engineering that routinely use PSI and BTU...