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Captain Colonial

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IME it's EU red tape that has never been enforced or adhered to anyway. Also inconsistent with volume and distance measurements. 

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Is it April 1st?

Totally ridiculous waste of time and energy

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The first time I went to Ireland in 1990, speed limits were in mph and distances in km. Or the other way round, can't remember which. 

 

At work, I use both imperial and metric measurements. 

Nuts and bolts are in mm, but screws are imperial. Not many people know what a 3/4, 8, panhead is.

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Our country is just odd. 
 

We buy fuel in litres, but measure consumption in mpg, drive miles, drink pints of beer, litres of juice, ml/cl of wine, etc etc. 

 

I struggle to think in imperial for things like weights and measures, but am hard wired to understand mpg, mph and road miles.
 

We should have went fully metric back in ‘71 when the coinage changed and locked up the luddites 🤣

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I think we do (weather) temperature measurement the best, if it’s chilly, we use Centigrade, but then as soon as it gets a bit warmer, we swap to Fahrenheit! So it can be 70 degrees in the day, and -2 degrees over night!

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No man has ever impressed the ladies with 225mm. 
 :getmecoat:

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The really bizarre one is surely tyre sizes (ignoring racing sizes, at least) where the diameter at the rim is in inches, but the tyre width is in millimetres. So how crazy is that? and presumably it is the same on the continent? 

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17 hours ago, Stu Faulkner said:

No man has ever impressed the ladies with 225mm. 
 :getmecoat:

 

Plenty of EU expats over here (especially in London) who know exactly what they are getting in metric... :oops: 

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On 29/05/2022 at 13:14, Robin Parker (Red Spider) - Yorkshire AO said:

The first time I went to Ireland in 1990, speed limits were in mph and distances in km. Or the other way round, can't remember which. 

 

At work, I use both imperial and metric measurements. 

Nuts and bolts are in mm, but screws are imperial. Not many people know what a 3/4, 8, panhead is.

I do and buy them at work..

The trouble is that now a no.8 screw is saying being called 5mm but then gets called M5 which of course it isn't...!

 

However nothing wrong with mixing units to suit ourselves...

 

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1 hour ago, Mole said:

 

However nothing wrong with mixing units to suit ourselves...

 

I was once told that something measured 21 inches 3mm. 

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I grew up using both, just leave things as they are.  Always thought it was strange buying wood, 2m of 2" by 4" seemed funny.

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12 hours ago, Robin Parker (Red Spider) - Yorkshire AO said:

I was once told that something measured 21 inches 3mm. 

When we bought the first Apache helicopters from the US, UK required Rolls Royce engines to be fitted to US airframe - issue is US in inches and UK in mm - hence aircraft was delivered with 'fuzzy metric' i.e. distance is 101.6mm or in US terms 4" made for interesting reading of the tech pubs!

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1 hour ago, Kingster said:

Didn’t that get NASA into trouble a few years back?

Aye, the straight conversions of a part were not an issue it was the multiple conversions and cumulative errors across assemblies and systems that got them into trouble. And in one case of too tight fit requiring an adjustment of ONE part, BOTH manufacturers adjusted (one smaller the other larger) leading to a loose fit and a LEAK!

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