Difference between revisions of "imperial system"
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− | A pound was a measure of weight from [[Earth]]'s imperial system of measurements; 2.2 pounds were about equal to one kilogram from the [[metric system]].<ref name="STSL"/> On [[Stardate]] [[2266#1512|1512.2]], [[Doctor]] [[McCoy, Leonard|McCoy]] changed [[Starfleet Captain|Captain]] [[Kirk, James T.|Kirk]]'s diet card to include more [[salad]], as his "weight was up a couple of pounds."<ref name="TOS02"/> | + | A pound was a measure of weight from [[Earth]]'s imperial system of measurements; 2.2 pounds were about equal to one kilogram from the [[metric system]].<ref name="STSL"/> On [[Stardate]] [[2266#1512|1512.2]], [[Doctor]] [[McCoy, Leonard|McCoy]] changed [[Starfleet Captain|Captain]] [[Kirk, James T.|Kirk]]'s diet card to include more [[salad]], as his "weight was up a couple of pounds."<ref name="TOS02"/> ''First Appearance: [[Star Trek|TOS]] [[The Man Trap (Episode)|05]] ([[1966 (Production)#SEP08|8 Sep 1966]])'' |
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Revision as of 16:35, 16 January 2022
Though largely superseded by the metric system, the Imperial system was still used by some well into the 23rd century, at least on an informal basis.[1]
Length
A mile was a measure of distance from Earth's Imperial system of measurements. On Stardate 1512.2, Lieutenant Commander Spock noted that the Fesarius was "a mile in diameter."[1] Ben Childress' quarters were located "about eleven miles" from the mining company on Rigel XII in 2266.[2] First Appearance: TOS 05 (8 Sep 1966)
Weight
A pound was a measure of weight from Earth's imperial system of measurements; 2.2 pounds were about equal to one kilogram from the metric system.[3] On Stardate 1512.2, Doctor McCoy changed Captain Kirk's diet card to include more salad, as his "weight was up a couple of pounds."[1] First Appearance: TOS 05 (8 Sep 1966)
Notes and References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "Where No Man Has Gone Before". Star Trek, season 1, episode 3 (Production number 02). Directed by James Goldstone. Written by Samuel A. Peeples. Desilu Productions. 22 September 1966.
- ↑ Roddenberry, Gene (Executive Producer). "The Corbomite Maneuver". Star Trek, season 1, episode 10 (Production number 03). Directed by Joseph Sargent. Written by Jerry Sohl. Desilu Productions. 10 November 1966.
- ↑ Bormanis, Andre. Star Trek: Science Logs. Pocket Books, March 1998.