For your consideration, I submit my design for a new ASME standard. The Scaling Banana.
How big is it? I need a banana for scale.
ApproximatelyExactly one banana.@Zachariah@lemmy.world its made from a composite of 4 3d scans of bananas purchased from 3 different retailers. So it’s the average size of your average banana.
Average is 4 inches right?
…right? Guys?
Are we talking mean, median, or mode?
Not to be confused with the near-identical ACME Exploding Banana.
Lemmy is so blessed to have this certified top-tier content.
This is so beautiful.
Other than the fact Australia will adopt it and I’ll be left using nominal banana sizes based on the US banana.
It’s also worth noting that in its final form it will be anodized yellow.
NIST about to sell this as a $2,900 standardized reference item just like the peanut butter
I would like to see the fixture holding that in place for each op in the machining process. I reckon you cut outside curve from a block then tapped the curve and operation 2 was held by a single bolt from underneath?
@KingJalopy@lemm.ee The wood fixture was only used for the finishing pass and engraving for the top. The rest was just held in the billet by leaving a .020" layer around all sides.
Bananas are a measurement of radiation…
So, this ignores the actual science behind a joke and only cares about the meme without understanding it.
Very apt name, because engineers are the only ones who would know and care about it.
@givesomefucks@lemmy.world This is not in reference to the radioactive potassium content of bananas. This is in reference to the internet trope of adding a “banana for scale” to uploaded pictures.
Yes …
The meme is because someone saw something about the banana equivalent dose, making it a standardized unit of measurement.
The joke was the misuse of the measurement.
Which I feel like is the same thing I just said, so hopefully it made more sense that way.
@givesomefucks@lemmy.world you’re the one missing the joke, this has nothing to do with banana radioactivity. I’m aware that bananas are used as an equivalent dose measurement of radiation. This has nothing to do with that.