Talk:Väinö Myllyrinne

Latest comment: 6 years ago by 185.113.82.114 in topic "(right)"

Untitled edit

"...then from 1940 onwards the second tallest man in the world (half an inch behind Don Koehler)" This is arguable. Koehler was only 15 in 1940; plus Mr. Myllyrinne, as per the Guinness record book, experienced a second phase of growth in his late thirties(latter 1940s). He was measured at 7 ft. 3-1/2 in. at the age of 21.Mytg8 15:23, 6 October 2006 (UTC)Reply

I suspect the 8 ft 3 in (or 99 in) Guinness figure could be based on misconversion, using a value of 2.5 cm for 1 inch instead of the proper 2.54 cm (99 × 2.5 cm = 247.5 cm), as I don't think he was ever claimed taller than 248 cm (8 ft 1½ in) in Finland. When last measured alive in 1962 he was 246 cm (8 ft 1 in) tall and weighed 170 kg (375 lb); at death his height was 246.8 cm (8 ft 1.17 in). The Finnish edition of Guinness listed him at 247 cm (8 ft 1¼ in) until the late 1980s, when finally succumbing to match the original version, I suppose. Earlier editions did have a footnote saying "may have been 251 cm at his tallest". Earlier measurements have given his height as 210 cm (6 ft 10½ in) at age 16, 218 cm (7 ft 2 in) upon military conscription (at age 19?), and 222 cm (7 ft 3½ in) with a weight of 135 kg (298 lb) during military service at age 21. The notion that he had stopped growing by age 21, until a further growth spurt in his late 30s may also be incorrect: I've heard several times that he was measured 245 cm (8 ft ½ in) with boots on in 1942 (aged 33) at a mill, and that the knife-carved mark can still be seen there. --Anshelm '77 00:48, 22 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

"31 stone" edit

Who came to the idea to measure him in stones? Can we replace that with 62.8 whiskey kegs? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.189.164.222 (talk) 01:33, 16 January 2012 (UTC)Reply

"(right)" edit

I'm glad the picture is captioned "Väinö Myllyrinne (right)". Otherwise I might not know which is him. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 185.113.82.114 (talk) 14:03, 17 July 2017 (UTC)Reply