- Feb 3, 2009
- 41,552
- 159,314
- 🥇 Banner finds
- 1
- Detector(s) used
- Deus, Deus 2, Minelab 3030, E-Trac,
- Primary Interest:
- Relic Hunting
Yeah, but what the heck is two-hundred-twenty-nine-thousand, four-hundred and eighty-eight hundred thousandths of a grain and can you find that measurement on your balance beam scale?
I just wonder how the Spainards did it. They obviously had a standard, and most likely the allowable deviation was a pretty low amount above the standard because silver is expensive. The United States of America used the Spanish dollar as the standard for our dollar, so the Spainard's standard must have been very accurate. So what was their standard?
Start taking the thousands/hundreds/tens off any number and you will have in accurate number down the road.
Shaving/clipping it did't matter what the angle was the trimmers of any PM (precious metal) was evident in society. So the weigh was the only way.
The Spaniards standard? I think they were a tad behind the Celtics in accuracy as they were perfecting in 50/60 BC. So it took another 500-700 yrs to have perfection?e
Take away the decimal point and round it off-some have taken that thousands and made millions. It happened when a couple of traders took the thousands and rounded the trade to the lesser amount...worked great as no one noticed until there was millions missing in the general ledgers of the stock exchange.
A piece of flour gold on it's own is really hard to weigh-though a little sack-now we have $$$.