ALMOST world-wide feet.  Russia, China and associates (CIS states, North Korea, 
Mongolia) were using meters.
 
Russia uses meters below transition level (where altimeters are adjusted for 
local pressure) but has gone to feet for "flight levels" (no altimeter 
adjustment, standard atmosphere is assumed) as part of introducing Reduced 
Minimum Vertical Separation at and above 29000 ft .  I'm not a pilot and I 
can't adequately explain China but at least in RMVS space they assign a flight 
level in meters, you have to convert on a government table and fly in feet on a 
foot-graduated altimeter. (I don't know what they do below transition altitude. 
 I'm sure a pilot could explain it better.  Almost all commercial cruise is 
above 29000 feet and in RMVS space, where the reduced separations have been 
introduced.
 
In Russia, you have to change from feet to meters for landing (and reverse on 
takeoff) but no change if you are overflying.  I'm sure the switching requires 
extra training.  As a non-pilot, it seems risky, but I'm not sure how much risk 
it introduces.  Russia and China went in somewhat different directions, each 
with their "associates" following, so there are two distinct exception spaces 
in the world, plus rest-of-world feet.
 

________________________________
 From: Paul Trusten <trus...@grandecom.net>
To: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu> 
Cc: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu> 
Sent: Wednesday, July 10, 2013 1:36 PM
Subject: [USMA:53056] Re: FAA must Metricate
  

Educate me, folks. I thought that feet were used worldwide in aviation because 
of the perceived danger of changing over to metric in some kind of terrifying 
interim. Do we in fact have both meters and feet being used in flight? Talk 
about your Gimli-Mars tragedies-in-the-making! 

Paul Trusten, Reg. Pharmacist
Vice President
U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
Midland, Texas USA
http://www.metric.org/ 
+1(432)528-7724
trus...@grandecom.net


On Jul 8, 2013, at 0:38, Bruce Arkwright Jr <a-bruie...@lycos.com> wrote:

> What if that poor tired Vietnamese pilot, forget he had hit the convert 
> button, after crossing into our air space, but still read meters instead of 
> feet as he aproched the landing strip? Will FAA emit to that? At any rate its 
> time for FAA to get on board!
> 
> 
> Bruce E. Arkwright, Jr
> Erie PA
> Linux and Metric User and Enforcer
> 
> 
> I will only invest in nukes that are 150 gigameters away. How much solar 
> energy have you collected today?
> Id put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope 
> we dont have to wait til oil and coal run out before we tackle that. I wish I 
> had a few more years left. -- Thomas Edison♽☯♑
> 
> 

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