pinholeboy
Member
The most bewildering thought I'm having is... who would make a box of exactly 144 sheets?![]()
... A dozen dozen was one gross. This is 12 x 12 which equals 144. So, at the time that paper was packed 144 was "normal".
So PE...how many millimeters in an Imperial gallon? HA HA. That makes sense though. It's funny how some things change over the years...number of exposures for a 35mm roll for example.
1 MILLILITER equals .0022 of an imperial gallon
SOURCE:
François Cardarelli, P.hD.
"Encyclopaedia of Scientific Units, Weights and Measures, Their SI Equivalences and Origins"
published by Springer-Verlag, http://www.springeronline.com
ISBN 1-85233-682-X
The International System of Units, abbreviated and commonly known as the SI, is officially known as Le Système International d'Unités and is overseen by the Bureau International des Poinds et Mesures located near Paris, France. Their website is
http://www.bipm.org
and their mission, as quoted from that website, is to "provide the basis for a single, coherent
system of measurements throughout the world, traceable to the International System of Units..."
So, the SI can handle British Barns and any other thing you want to throw at it.![]()
I was asking about millimeters! My idea of humor...
Hi,
I have a question I was hoping that someone could help me with.
I own a box of 11x14 Kodak AZO paper (F-0). The box is in good condition and unopened, holds 144 sheets.
Can anyone give me an idea what this might be worth? Also how do I tell the age of the paper?
Thanks for your help!
Gordon
View attachment 42304 View attachment 42305
If you really want to get confused on old measurement systems get stuck in looking at old English systems for acres, townships, etc
I don't remember exactly, but it seems to me Kodak began the move from packages of 12 and 144, to 10, 25, and 100 around 1950-1955. Agfa and others followed along soon after.
I have always thought it ridiculous to sell sheet film in boxes of 25 which means one can load 12 holders and have a sheet left over in the box. Paper was boxed in the same quantities as film.
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