>anyone know of a good unit converter for viscosity; both kinematic
>and absolute? With all the viscosity units, not just some of them.
>Temp vs viscosity (oil) functions would also be helpful.
If you can find one the units conversion on an HP-48G+ is absolutely
spectacular. The built-in conversions cover all of what you'll need, but
you can make custom conversions as well. HP is out of the calculator
business, but you can find web sites (try Google) with HP machinery on
sale. I have 2, and if it last as long as my old HP-67, I won't need to
buy another until I'm 104.
Christopher Wright P.E. |"They couldn't hit an elephant at <a href="/group/PipingDesign/post?postID=wZBEVmHmGWhctK7UT5qcp86YPhTuozYSx8vHvks3NH4nx68yJRu81ghRr8-UETb4gF8lTfjcz0MYaCvQihY">chrisw@skypoint.com</a> | this distance" (last words of Gen.
___________________________| John Sedgwick, Spotsylvania 1864)<a href="http://www.skypoint.com/~chrisw">http://www.skypoint.com/~chrisw</a> Received on Mon Apr 21 12:48:00 2003
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