A similar American system, of lesser popularity, is ''
Ramsden's or the engineer's system'', where the chain consists also of 100 links, each one
foot (0.3048 m) long. The original of such chains was that constructed, to very high precision, for the measurement of the baselines of the
Anglo-French Survey (1784–1790) and the
Principal Triangulation of Great Britain. The even less common
Rathborn system, also from the 17th century, is based on a 200-link chain of two
rods (33 feet, 10.0584 m) length. Each rod (or perch or pole) consists of 100 links, (1.98 inches, 50.292 mm each), which are called
seconds (), ten of which make a
prime (, 19.8 inches, 0.503 m).
Vincent Wing made chains with 9.90-inch links, most commonly as 33-foot half-chains of 40 links. These chains were sometimes used in the American colonies, particularly Pennsylvania. In
India, surveying chains (occasionally 30 metres) in length are used. Links are long. In France after the
French Revolution, and later in countries that had adopted the
Metric System, 10-metre (32 ft 9.7 in) chains, of 50 links each long were used until the 1950s. ==See also==