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Revision as of 05:24, 11 May 2014

The link (usually abbreviated as "l.", "li." or "lnk."), also called a Gunter’s link, is a unit of length in the United States customary system of measurements. A link is exactly 3350 of a survey foot,[1] or exactly 7.92 survey inches.

The unit is based on Gunter's chain, a metal chain tool of 100 links that was formerly used in land surveying. Even after the original tool was replaced by later instruments of higher precision, the unit itself was commonly used in this application throughout the English-speaking world, only dwindling in use during the 20th century. It is rarely used now.

Proportions to other customary units

Twenty-five links make a rod (16.5 feet).
One hundred links make a chain.
One thousand links make a furlong.
Eight thousand links make a mile.
1 link  ≡  0.01 chain
0.04 rod
0.66 foot
0.22 yard
7.92 inches

History

Edmund Gunter designed and introduced the Gunter's chain in England in 1620. By correlating traditional English land measurements with the new decimal number system (which had just replaced Roman numerals), it combined ease and flexibility in taking surveying measurements in the field with ease of calculating results afterwards. It rapidly gained acceptance in English surveying practise, which also began to adopt the tool's chain and link lengths as units of measure within the English system of units. As English dominions grew over time, its system of measures came to be used in many parts of the world.

When the American colonies broke their ties with Great Britain in 1776, they needed to establish a system of units that fell under their own political authority.[citation needed] While they adopted many of the British units, the length of the yard (which determined all other units of length) was by necessity governed by the length of a physical artifact. The one in American possession was slightly different in actual length from the British one, due to imprecision of manufacture.[citation needed] It was of only minor significance at the time.

In 1824, Great Britain officially reformed their system of units in legislation that established what came to be known as the Imperial system, but the standard of the yard remained the length of the artifact. The last replacement imperial artifact was made in bronze in 1845, and the most accurate measurement ever made of its length (much later) was 0.914 398 416 meters. In the U.S., the Mendenhall Order of 1893 tied the length of the U.S. yard to the meter, with the equivalence 39.37 inches = 1 meter, or approximately 0.914 401 828 803 658 meters per yard. In 1959, the international yard and pound agreement established the "international" yard length of 0.9144 meters, upon which both the customary U.S. and imperial units of length have since been based.

Even so, the Mendenhall Order length of the yard continues in use even in 2013 in the United States as the basis for the survey foot. The prior land survey data for North America of 1927 (NAD27) had been based on the survey foot, and a new triangulation based on the metric system (NAD83) was not released until 1986. Since that time, the State Plane Coordinate Systems (SPCSs) established by the U.S. Geodetic Survey have been based in SI units in all states. But a few states have established by law that they must remain available in survey feet as well.

Absolute Length

In all measurement systems, the link has remained fixed at 0.66 feet, therefore 0.22 yards or 7.92 inches; it is the absolute length of the yard that has varied. The only known remaining application of the link is in the service of some surveying in the United States, which relates then to the definition of the survey foot. During most of its useful life, a modern degree of precision in the link's measure was neither expected nor possible. For historical purpose, though, we can establish three highly accurate conversions to SI equivalents.

1 link  ≈  201.167 652 millimetres (based on the pre-1959 imperial foot)
201.168 402 336 815 millimetres (based on the U.S. "survey" foot derived from the Mendenhall Order)
= 201.168 millimetres exactly (based on the international foot)

See also

References

  1. ^ Holloway, Thomas (1881). The practical surveyor. Horace Cox. London. p.4. Retrieved May 31, 2013.