flycast:
As a cyclist, you've probably run into discussion of gears in terms of "gear-inches", which is the traditional way of measuring gears and has persisted to this day, despite its historical origins. Here's what that's all about:
If you had no chain drive, but could only drive your wheel by cranks and pedals rigidly connected to the wheel hub, then the only way to get a higher gear, i.e. to go farther with one turn of the cranks, would be to have a larger diameter wheel. This is exactly how the old "high wheelers" or velocipedes from the late 19th century worked, and it explains why they had such huge front wheels. Ultimately, the thing that limited their gearing (aside from the difficulty of riding a bike while perched some four or five feet in the air) was the length of the cyclists' legs, since they still had to be able to reach the pedals.
That's why gears were originally measured in gear-inches - it was literally the diameter of the wheel in question. Nowadays, we all use bikes that change the ratio of pedal/crank rotations to distance traveled by changing the ratio of pedal rotations to wheel rotations (by some mechanical means), so our wheels all have the same diameter (for a given style of bike).
In order to compare our gears with the traditional definition, you have to ask "what would be the diameter of a fixed wheel that had the same mechanical advantage as my selected gear on my bike?" To answer that, you have to multiply the ratio of wheel rotations to pedal rotations - which is equal to the the ratio of chain ring teeth to cog teeth - by 27 inches, which is the approximate diameter of a standard road bike wheel in inches.
For example, if you have a 50-tooth chain ring and a 25-tooth rear cog, then your rear wheel turn twice for every rotation of the pedal cranks. Thus you will move a distance equal to twice the circumference of your wheel. That's the same as one rotation of a wheel with twice the diameter, i.e. 54 inches. So you move as far for each rotation of your pedals as you would on a velocipede with a 54 inch wheel, hence you have a gear of 54 gear-inches.