Hi Eugene
Thanks for your summary! [^1] I'm in favour of the proposed
definitions and would welcome if the clarifications regarding size you
made here [^2] were included in the definitions, like for example
(*additions*, ~~deletions~~):
canal - Large man-made open flow (free flow vs pipe flow) wa
I've fixed fire_hydrant:diameter legend on wiki page.
> If you ever need pictures of those signs, please contact me, I have plenty of
> them, but I have to look them up.
Marc, and anyone that has pictures of these signs, can you give them to us, to
insert them on wiki page?
Thank you,
Alberto
On Thu, 31 Jan 2019 at 13:57, Warin <61sundow...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 31/01/19 13:02, John Willis via Tagging wrote:
>
> On Jan 31, 2019, at 10:17 AM, Warin <61sundow...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> There are, or were 'cubs' for the younger people, 'rovers' for the older
> people, guides for the girls
Hi Markus,
I find your amendments great.
Cheers,
Eugene
чт, 31 янв. 2019 г. в 20:29, Markus :
> Hi Eugene
>
> Thanks for your summary! [^1] I'm in favour of the proposed
> definitions and would welcome if the clarifications regarding size you
> made here [^2] were included in the definitions, li
Yes, great descriptions!
My only marginal objection is for canal: why don't you ditch (pun intended...)
the "/used to carry useful water for transportation, hydro-power generation,
//irrigation or land drainage purposes/" clause?
Are there any other "/Large man-made open flow (free flow vs pipe
I wonder whether we are arguing hypotheticals here.
Is there still highway signage, anywhere, with weight limits in long
tons? I don't know, but I'd have imagined that the UK would have gone
to metric signs a long time ago. (I imagine that there are still
historic bridges with the old placards on
On 01/02/19 11:28, Kevin Kenny wrote:
I wonder whether we are arguing hypotheticals here.
Well long tones (lt) helps explain short tons.
Both lbs and kg appear in the data base .. so I'll add them.
So do 'person', I assume for a lift/elevator. Add that too.
There are some strange units ..exa
It appears in the descriptions that a 'ditch' can be used as a 'drain'.
So why have a tag 'drain'?
The only differences I have between canal and the other things is large
verse small and usefull quantity.
Rather subjective, not a objective measurement. If the differences as so
arbitrary why di