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About these units
Yard (yd)
A yard equals 3 feet or 36 inches and serves as a mid-range imperial length unit. Historically, one definition of the yard was the distance from the tip of King Henry I's nose to his thumb when his arm was extended, though later attempts standardized the measure. Today, yards appear in sports (football, golf), textiles (fabric sales), and landscaping. In construction and engineering, the yard is sometimes used for larger distances where a foot would be too small a unit and a mile too large. Because it divides cleanly into both inches and feet, the yard plays a structural role in the imperial measurement system. It bridges the gap between human-scale and large-scale distances.
Mil (mil)
A mil is an imperial-derived engineering unit equal to one-thousandth of an inch. It is used extensively in manufacturing, machining, and electrical engineering. Printed circuit board (PCB) trace widths, for instance, are often measured in mils because the unit provides a convenient scale for precision without resorting to decimals in inches. Because 1 mil equals 25.4 micrometers, it occupies a scale appropriate for tolerances in industrial production, coatings, film thickness, and gaskets. The mil is especially common in the United States, where certain engineering standards still rely on the imperial system. It provides an intuitive small-scale measurement for technicians accustomed to inches, helping avoid errors that might result from metric conversions.