Probably because it works well in a CAD/CAM system. Which doesn’t alter my point that, for most of us in day-to-day life, a duodecimal or hexidecimal base works better much of the time.
I’m not arguing that English is superior to metric in all circumstances, only that the supposed superiority of metric is not so compelling as to warrant, all by itself, converting if you do not already use it.
Not quite true … the British medical profession always weigh in kilos and measure height, etc., in metres. I was told in hospital this is to facilitate the correct calculation of dosages, etc., which come in metric measures.
If we’re being nitpicking, the pound is a British unit of weight, and slug is a British unit of mass. When have you ever known us use just one unit for anything?
I assure you giving masses in pounds[-mass] is astronomically more prevalent than giving them in slugs.
As snotty as he is, Eric defines pounds-mass as well as pounds-weight, and in fact recommends using the qualifier for both.
I think this justifies my assertion that “Imperial uses pounds for both.”
So there
BTW, it is obvious that I’m just trying to wriggle out of admitting I make an imprecise and technically false statement about a page ago, right? Don’t worry, I’m eating humble pie in my head, but I’m determined to fight this one to the end. It’s a matter of pride now.
Interesting (at least to me as curator at this British Coast Artillery Fort in Canada) is the fact that our British-made 1890s 6-inch gun barrels are marked by weight, for example:
4 - 19 - 0 - 6 which means 4 long tons, 19 cwt (hundredweight), zero quarterweight (which is two stone, incidentally), and 6 pounds. Well done Ellswick Ordnance Company!
Okay, for the decimal inches, I can see how that might be appealing to the CAD/CAM designers sitting safely behind their desks.
But the tenths of a foot on a tape measure? Carpenters and construction workers have to use these things every day. Presumably, this means that having to measure out “ten point eight feet” of something – and having to relay this information from the paper to the guy reading the paper to the guy that has to use the measurement – is every bit as easy as having to measure out “ten feet nine inches” of something.
by “we”, I meant the British people as individuals.
A nurse might spend his/her whole day weighing people in kilos, but when he/she gets gets home the only things on the scales that count are stones and pounds…
Sun headline: ‘Phew, What A Scorcher… 37c at Bournemouth’
I don’t think we do much worrying about it. Weather forecasters give the temperature in Celsius and just add a translation for those of us more familiar with the old scale.
According to this highly anti-metric article, a shopkeeper in Englad can be fined up to £5,000 for weighing goods in pounds and ounces rather than in kilograms.
Can the government take action against you even if you weigh things in dual units, i.e. both ounces and grams?
The reason that a survey foot is 12.000024 long is because, before 1960, the US inch was equal to 1.000012 modern US inches. Why is that the case?
In 1960 (or 1959), the US Standard System of measurement was redefined (to some extent) to be a variation of the SI. The US “statute” inch was legally redefined to be 2.54 centimeters, exactly. Before then, it had actually been slightly longer. In matters of ordinary commerce, the difference wasn’t so large that it wouldn’t self-adjust as old equipment was replaced. However, the US Geological Survey had a lot of work done under the old standard. Two choices: Either re-calibrate all the maps or define a “survey inch” at 1.000021 statute inches.
No, in the UK weight’s are generally given in both imperial and metric.
There are good reason for the fines as 1) Imperial only equipment is not standard euipment which means the shopkeeper could be on the fiddle 2) Johnny Foreigner and younger Brits like me who were taught only the metric system at school may have little idea of how much each imperial measurement is, which is inconvient and presents another oppurtunity for the shopkeeper to fiddle us out of our mooler.
WWNY-TV in Watertown NY and CKWS-TV in Kingston, Ontario, about 40 miles apart and serving much the same audience, customarily give the temperatures in the official units for the two countries, so that Watertown might be 72 and Kingston 22 in summer, or Watertown 15 and Kingston -10 in winter. (And amusingly the weathermen never mention that the temperatures are on two different scales.)