If you go back to the early days of rocketry, motors were measured in terms of pound-seconds of impulse. At the time, the US was on the slow track to go completely metric in about 10-15 years (by the early 80's IIRC) and NAR was one of the "early adopters". The pound-second measurements were difficult to work with because MOST motors available at the time actually ended up being a FRACTION (decimal actually) of a pound-second. For instance, IIRC going from memory, the B6-4 was actually a B.8-4 under the old pound second system (or something like that... you get the idea). This is a very clumsy way of dealing with the numbers. Science labs had pretty much all switched to metric, and since rocketry is a "scientific hobby" the decision was made to switch to metric, hence the switch to newton-seconds for impulse, millimeters and centimeters for dimensional measurement, grams for weight, cubic centimeters for volume, etc.
As it turned out, the general population never wanted to switch over to metric, and the gov'ts attempts at FORCING the switch didn't go well. SO, the US finally quit pretending and dropped the "official" metric switchover, for the most part. (Metric is indeed much handier for many things, especially scientific endeavors where the easy conversion of measurements is critical, since it's all based on powers of ten, rather than abstract fractions like halves, quarters, eighths, sixteens, thirty-seconds, sixty-fourths, etc. like imperial measurements are...) Lots of stuff in the industrial world is pretty much all metric now, or the vast majority is, like hydraulic fittings, bolts, nuts, even driveline shafts have mostly gone metric now... but there's still just enough standard stuff around to complicate things.
Interestingly enough, most of the engineering at NASA has been done in imperial measurement, whereas the science side of NASA switched to metric basically from the get-go. This resulted in the loss of at least one spacecraft when the unit conversion wasn't done and the imperial units were entered into the guidance system operating on metric without being converted over in the units, so only a fraction of the propulsive power needed was actually produced, causing the vehicle to crash. I think that this drove the change to all-metric within NASA IIRC... (can't recall exactly).
Why newton-seconds?? Simple... newtons is the measure of force, and seconds is the measure of time. Total impulse is thrust multiplied by time. Hence newton-seconds. In imperial measure, pounds-force is the measure of force (to differentiate it from pounds-mass, to describe what's actually being measured) and seconds is the measure of time, so hence pounds-seconds.
Later! OL JR
