Metrication

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Rhythm Thief

Legendary Member
Location
Ross on Wye
For some reason I also know that a chain is 22 yards (length of a cricket pitch) and that 12d is a shilling. And that there were 20 shillings to the pound. Among other odd facts from a system which was history months before I was born.:wacko:
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
Clearly metric is the easy one to use as it is all in base 10 rather than the silly 14 ounces is one pound and 16 pounds in a stone daftness.

I'd be complaining about short measures if I was buying goods with only fourteen ounces to the pound. Your second error mistakes compensates for the first error for all weights comprising whole stones.
 

the_mikey

Legendary Member
I use metric as much as possible, and convert everything to metric, never used imperial at school ever, I use km and km/h on my cycling computer, as a communications engineer, I only work with the speed of light in metres per second, and not yards, feet or miles. Imperial measurements always require conversion to a base 10 measurement before I can use them in any meaningful way (other than measuring a chest of drawers for an elderly family member to see if it'll fit in a space).
 

the_mikey

Legendary Member
I do refuse to accept the cm as a practical unit of measurement though. Litres are a bit stupid as well.

'cm' is just a non standard way of representing a measurement in metres, most people tend to only use mm, m, cm and km. All the µ, m, c and k do is move the decimal point around in a number.

µm - micro metres - 1000000µm
mm - mili metres - 1000mm
cm - centi metres - 100cm
m - metres - 1m
km - kilo metres 0.001km
Mm - mega metres 0.000001 Mm
 

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
For some reason I also know that a chain is 22 yards (length of a cricket pitch) and that 12d is a shilling. And that there were 20 shillings to the pound. Among other odd facts from a system which was history months before I was born.:wacko:

Oh heck.

I spent the first two years of my life in old money....

Hilldodger's 'sh*tload' remark reminded me - one of our local Look North newsreaders does the Breakfast slot, which includes travel, and whenever there is a hold up due to a lorry shedding a load, she pronounces it as 'shedload', instead of 'shed load'. Always makes me laugh...
 

Glow worm

Legendary Member
Location
Near Newmarket
I've never got on with metric since I accidentally asked a butcher in France for 200 kilos of beef mince. It slowly dawned on me I should have said grams as he cheerfully stuffed half a herd of cattle down the mincer.

It's a sad fact that in the UK you are more likely to go to prison for dealing drugs in ounces rather than grams than for actually dealing drugs.

Apart from anything else- metric's a waste of breath. I'm one meter, seventy eight centimeters tall. That's 11 syllables! In English, I'm 5 10 - only two syllables- job done.

There's a small village near here called Six mile Bottom which will have to be renamed 'Ten Kilometer Bottom' - sounds crap! (Although I think it was named after one of my ex's). The Famous Rowley Mile Course here in Newmarket would have to become the Rowley 1.6 kilometers course. Frankly, that's just hideous.

And what about music? The Proclaimers would, god forbid, have to walk '800 kilometers'. In The Police's 'Can't stand losing you' the line 'Your brother's gonna kill me and he's 6 feet 10' would be 'your brother's gonna kill me and he's 2.0828 meters'. Neil Diamond would no longer be '1000 miles away' but '1600 kilometers away'. (Some would say that's not far enough either way). Golden Earring would no longer be 8 miles high but 13 kilometers- all sounds a bit cold, clinical and dull to me. And none of it scans.

Finally, it's a well known fact that since British house builders started using metric, more new houses than ever have collapsed, simply becasue there are fewer meters than feet.*








*There's a small chance I made that bit up.:biggrin:
 

Glow worm

Legendary Member
Location
Near Newmarket
'cm' is just a non standard way of representing a measurement in metres, most people tend to only use mm, m, cm and km. All the µ, m, c and k do is move the decimal point around in a number.

µm - micro metres - 1000000µm
mm - mili metres - 1000mm
cm - centi metres - 100cm
m - metres - 1m
km - kilo metres 0.001km
Mm - mega metres 0.000001 Mm

I'll take your word for it! Blimey!!:wacko:
 

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
I guess anyone in engineering will use both quite easily and convert one to the other with some near enough approximation. 75 mm..that's 3 inches. If i try to visualise something i'm making, its in inches.
Engineerings all metric, mtrs, mms, we use it all the time, but i still quickly visualise them as imperial
, perhaps not because i have to, but because i can and its 'familiar'..not that metrics not, its just what i was brought up with.
Petrol and comnsumption, i always work in gallons.
Weights, there's no call anymore for imperial measures (small units)..i dont even bother converting, and yet i know what 10 stone is..if someone said they're 90 kilos, wouldnt have a clue what that meant visually.

So, i keep a foot in both camps. We're a dying breed :biggrin:
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
'cm' is just a non standard way of representing a measurement in metres, most people tend to only use mm, m, cm and km. All the µ, m, c and k do is move the decimal point around in a number.

µm - micro metres - 1000000µm
mm - mili metres - 1000mm
cm - centi metres - 100cm
m - metres - 1m
km - kilo metres 0.001km
Mm - mega metres 0.000001 Mm

I'm not used to seeing the above formats of metric units and sub-units of measurement

1µm = 1 x 10[sup]-6 [/sup]m
1mm = 1 x 10-3 m
1cm = 1 x 10[sup]-2[/sup] m
1km = 1 x 10[sup]3[/sup]m
1Mn = 1 x 10[sup]6[/sup]m

I've never encountered the megametre before and had to look it up. It's rarely used and thousands of kilometres are more often than not expressed in full e.g. 5000km rather than 5Mm. It also apparently avoids the possibility of 5Mm being confused with 5mm.
 

marinyork

Resting in suspended Animation
Location
Logopolis
'cm' is just a non standard way of representing a measurement in metres, most people tend to only use mm, m, cm and km. All the µ, m, c and k do is move the decimal point around in a number.

µm - micro metres - 1000000µm
mm - mili metres - 1000mm
cm - centi metres - 100cm
m - metres - 1m
km - kilo metres 0.001km
Mm - mega metres 0.000001 Mm

Trivially, and all the others you missed out, your point being?
 
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